Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
This study aims to understand the use of continuous glucose monitors (CGM) in Asian Americans with type 2 diabetes (T2D). Researchers will compare participants on continuous glucose monitors with participants using fingerstick self-monitoring with the aim of answering the following questions:
Full description
The Type 2 Diabetes (T2D) pandemic continues to expand in the U.S. and globally. However, the prevalence of T2D is much higher in Asian-Americans (AA) and in other minorities compared to non-Hispanic Whites in the U.S, and AAs have the highest age- and sex-adjusted undiagnosed rate of T2D (7.5%) compared to all other ethnic and racial groups. There is ample evidence that disparities in diagnosis and care for T2D exist in AA communities. The majority of AAs are 1st generation immigrants, and this has further contributed to the disparity in care and diagnosis of diabetes due to the following reasons:
Rapidly advancing diabetes technologies, especially CGM, can achieve better metabolic targets, lower diabetes-related complications, and provide a better quality of life, which have been reported for other ethnic groups but not for AAs due to the systemic exclusion of AAs from CGM studies. Multiple systemic barriers exist for AA to access CGMs, including costs and lack of data to justify reimbursement, provider inertia, and lack of advocacy and vocalization of needs, on top of limited English proficiency and lack of culturally-tailored education. These barriers are in addition to a lack of "Digital Literacy", the new "super social determinant of health", which will increase disparities between those who have skills and access to digital tools and those who do not. In this proposal, we will evaluate the impact, barriers and facilitators of CGM use and adherence in AAs (1st generation ChA) with T2D.
In this 6-month clinical trial, we will examine the impact of CGM use vs. No CGM among 1st generation ChA with T2D.The aim will be to:
3: Identify multi-level barriers and facilitators of CGM use for ChA with T2D, using a socioecological framework (patient-level, provider-level, and community/environment level). We aim to comprehensively evaluate the implementation process (facilitators and impediments), resource requirements, and intermediate patient adherence outcomes for the program using mixed-methods approaches. These will inform the design of culturally-tailored interventions for larger RCT.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
30 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Hetal Shah, MD, MPH; Atif Adam, PhD, MD, MPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal