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Telemedicine for Reach, Education, Access and Treatment-ongoing (TREAT-ON)

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University of Pittsburgh

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Diabetes Mellitus

Treatments

Behavioral: TREAT-ON
Behavioral: Usual Care

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT04107935
1R34DK123370-01 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
STUDY19080005

Details and patient eligibility

About

Diabetes (DM) management requires health care providers to provide patients with the appropriate amount of time, education and support that are necessary for quality care. Unfortunately, this is often impeded by limited access to resources, particularly in rural communities where DM rates are high and providers are scarce. Therefore, study investigators propose addressing these issues by implementing a model of care that includes diabetes educator (DE)-led planned visits with a real-time videoconferencing telemedicine program for ongoing patient support to improve DM outcomes.

Full description

Health care systems need to seek ways through quality improvement, care coordination, and workforce capacity to support quality care. It has been proposed that new models of care coupled with technology are needed. DM provides an ideal model for testing new approaches as the number of people with DM continues to rise, with an inverse shortage of health providers available to meet their needs. Most patients with Type 2 DM (T2DM) are seen in primary care (PC) where providers report barriers to comprehensive care that include limited time, educational resources, added workload and feeling ill-equipped to counsel patients on behavior change. Efforts to restructure PC are underway, like DE-led planned management visits, reported to improve healthy behaviors and outcomes in patients at high risk. DEs are well suited to support the skills, decision making, self-care behaviors, problem solving and active collaboration with the care team that serve as the foundation for diabetes self-management education and key to an effective planned visit. DEs supporting care and self-management education in PC have been shown to improve access and outcomes. For patients to sustain a lifetime of behavior to effectively self-manage, continued support to sustain the ongoing skills, knowledge, and behaviors required to manage their condition is needed. Given the need for enduring support and scarcity of providers, particularly in underserved rural areas, efforts to understand how best to re-design practice to involve DEs in PC and utilize technology to enable and scale engagement in self-management and ongoing support must be considered. The purpose of this application is to evaluate the deployment of Telemedicine for Reach, Education, Access, Treatment and Ongoing Support (TREAT-ON), a DE-driven, PC-based telemedicine model that relies on PC practice redesign to afford access to real-time ongoing support. Investigators hypothesize that the TREAT-ON model will help individuals identified as being high risk in an underserved rural community to achieve and sustain improvements in clinical, psychosocial and behavioral outcomes, and aim to demonstrate the model's viability in terms of feasibility and acceptability to inform future testing of TREAT-ON.

Enrollment

43 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Intervention group: UPMC Health Plan patient-members who are 18-75y, have diagnosis of type 2 diabetes, are considered "high risk" (HbA1c >9%), receiving care at participating Federally Qualified Health Centers, and willing and able to participate in a technology-supported intervention.
  • Control group: The control group will be selected from individuals who have already participated in the UPMC Health Plan's Diabetes High Risk Initiative.

Exclusion criteria

  • Non UPMC Health Plan patients
  • Not enrolled in the UPMC Health Plan Diabetes High Risk Initiative
  • Less than 18 or greater than 75 years of age
  • Unwilling/unable to participate in the telemedicine diabetes education program

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

43 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention
Experimental group
Treatment:
Behavioral: TREAT-ON
Usual Care
Other group
Treatment:
Behavioral: Usual Care

Trial documents
3

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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