View clinical trials related to Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2.
Filter by:Much evidence exists that new, more effective methods of delivering care to diabetics are necessary. In our current system of delivering care, diabetes care is often done in the context of multiple other issues addressed during a regular office visit. Providers often lack the time to properly educate patients on diabetes self management topics. This project hopes to show that group visits can improve clinical outcomes, patient satisfaction, provider satisfaction, and patient's self management knowledge, while decreasing cost. This group visit method can make care more patient-centered and team based which is in alignment with our organization's goal of becoming a true patient centered medical home. If successful, this could expand to our other family medicine clinic sites and provide a valuable learning opportunity for the family medicine residents at OHSU. The investigators will first identify newly diagnosed diabetics (diagnosed within the last 12 months) at the South Waterfront and Gabriel Park family medicine clinics using EPIC. The investigators will invite those diabetics identified from the South Waterfront clinic to participate in 6 group visits that will follow a curriculum that the investigators created based on the National Standards for Diabetes Self Management Education and the ACP Diabetes Care Guide. This curriculum will address basic pathophysiology of diabetes, the "ABCs to Better Diabetic Care" as defined by the ACP Diabetes Care Guide, setting goals, nutrition, exercise, diabetic medications, and complications of diabetes. This intervention group will be compared to a control cohort identified at the Gabriel Park clinic that will continue to receive standard diabetes care from their primary physician. The investigators will look at and compare clinical outcomes (Hemoglobin A1C, blood pressure (BP), and LDL cholesterol levels), adherence to recommended preventive measures for diabetics (foot exams, eye exams, yearly microalbumin, and immunizations), patient and provider satisfaction, as well as cost. Cost data will be collected using EPIC to look at the costs involved in group visits compared to the cost of delivering diabetic care through the standard individual medical appointment. The investigators may also use EPIC to look at utilization of specialty services, emergency room visits, and inpatient admissions and compared utilization across groups.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate if treatment with vitamin D increase beta cell function and insulin sensitivity in subjects with pre-diabetes or newly diagnosed diabetes mellitus type 2.
The goal of this research is to evaluate the impact and feasibility of using web-based patient-provider communication and a remote glucose monitoring tool to improve post-hospitalization glycemic control and patient self-care. The investigators hypothesize that providing patients this web-based tool over a 4-week period after discharge to home will result in more effective glycemic control compared to usual care, and that patients with access to the "tool kit" will have a trend towards improved diabetes self-management and less diabetes-related distress.
Dietary modification is of great essential for the prevention and treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Common oat (Avena sativa L.) and its products showed a great potential benefits on NCDs including type 2 diabetes mellitus. But data about such effects of naked oat (Avena nuda L.) is still unavailable. The investigators aimed to examine the effects of organic naked oat with whole germ (ONOG) plus diet on patients with type 2 diabetes. After a pre-study with healthy adults, a randomized, single-blinded, multi-arm parallel trial of 30 days would be carried out in adults of 50-65 years old with type 2 diabetes. Participants would be randomly assigned to one of the four following groups: usual care group (only basic health advice, no other interventions), diet group (systematic education, structured dietary), 50g-ONOG plus diet group (all the interventions of diet group plus replacement of 50g ONOG per day) and 100g-ONOG plus diet group. A regular follow-up for years would be carried out to predict the long-term effects of ONOG plus diet intervention on patients with type 2 diabetes. The investigators hypothesized that ONOG combined with diet would have better effects on glycaemia and insulin resistance control in addition to those yielded by diet or usual care.
The aim of this 20 week study is to show that glimepiride/atorvastatin fixed dose combination tablet is safe and as effective as atorvastatin + glimepiride combination taken as separate tablets, in improving glycaemic control (glycated haemoglobin, HbA1c) and cholesterol levels (Low-density lipoprotein, LDL) in diabetic subjects, who are inadequately controlled on a stable dose of metformin. Eight dose combinations will be included.
This study is conducted in Africa. The aim of this study is to estimate the percentage of children and adolescents below or equal to 15 years in Tunisia with acceptably controlled diabetes mellitus type 1.
This study is conducted in Asia. The aim of this study is to review the efficacy and safety of insulin treatment with InnoLet® in daily clinical practice.
This study is conducted in Asia. The aim of this study is to assess patient satisfaction after switching to biphasic human insulin 30 treatment using the NovoLet® insulin device as treatment for diabetes mellitus under normal clinical practice setting.
This study is conducted in Asia. The aim of this study is to evaluate the overall acceptance of healthcare professionals (nurses and doctors) to the NovoLet® system used in a hospital environment.
This study is conducted in Asia. The aim of this study is to assess the efficacy, safety and convenience of the use of Mixtard® 30 NovoLet® used alone or combined with oral hypoglycaemic agent (OHA) in the management of type 2 diabetes mellitus in an out-patient setting.