View clinical trials related to Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2.
Filter by:The aim of present study was to evaluate how the 2018 classification reflects the severity, extent and progression of the disease, taking into account the risk factors for periodontal disease, smoking and diabetes, when compared with the 1999 classification.
Diabetes mellitus currently affects 463 million people worldwide. One of the most serious complications of diabetes is the diabetic foot. Adequate foot care behaviours reduce the risk of ulcers, infections, and amputations, and improve the quality of life, in these patients. This Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial aims to analyse the impact of different educational strategies - an instructive video (Video Watching Group - Experimental Group 1) compared with a leaflet on foot care with real-time guided reading (Real-Time Leaflet Reading Group - Experimental Group 2) and with standard teaching on diabetic foot care (Standard Care - Control Group) - on adherence and knowledge regarding diabetic foot care, as well as on patient's perception of their foot health. Participants will be assessed at the first consultation of the diabetic foot (T0), about two weeks after the first assessment (T1), and three months after the T0 in a follow-up assessment (T2), with T1 and T2 being performed through telephone calls, after obtaining the patients' consent. The results of the present study will inform educational interventions regarding foot care adherence in patients with diabetic foot, in order to decrease the likelihood of developing diabetic foot ulcers and, consequently, to reduce amputation rates and the several associated costs, contributing to improving patients' quality of life.
This is a pilot study conducted at the Bronx MWCCS Clinical Research Site in the Bronx, NY. We will recruit 60 individuals with coexisting asthma and/or Type 2 DM from this cohort. During the 3 month study period, these 60 participants will receive a comprehensive mobile health (mHealth) app, WELLXcel which includes: 1) guideline-based asthma and diabetes education delivered through interactive features such as animated videos and tailored push notifications; 2) the collection of PRO measures to enable patients symptom self-tracking. During this study, we will evaluate the association between baseline digital health literacy and favorable clinical outcomes related to the WELLXcel study intervention.
The purpose of this research is to understand the impact of medically tailored meals on health-related biometrics (e.g., glucose time-in-range, waist-hip ratio, cholesterol) and how providing medically tailored meals promotes engagement in diabetes education and drives information-seeking behavior.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of 2 doses of dulaglutide in Japanese participants with type 2 diabetes. The study duration is approximately 58 weeks.
Sleep problems are associated with poor blood glucose control, but current diabetes self-management programs do not include sleep education. This study will randomize participants into two groups: one that receives sleep education and one that does not. The researchers expect both groups to experience reductions in blood glucose. The researchers hypothesize that individuals who receive sleep education as part of their diabetes self-management training will experience greater improvements in blood glucose control, as measured by hemoglobin A1c, compared to the control group.
With the advanced management of diabetes and new innovative anti-hyperglycemic therapy hyperglycemia remains a culprit factor affecting the outcome of patients admitted to the hospital in general wards. Efforts from health care providers to assess and control blood sugar by a simplified method such as certified point of care hand-sized glucometers is the fruitful protocol if the results near the target that is endorsed by well-known diabetes societies. In non-critically patients the premeal blood sugar ≤140 mg /dl and ≤ 180 mg /dl after a meal. The unstable economy and political crises with the pandemic of Covid-19 making us use a glucometer to monitor and control the fluctuation of blood sugar in order to decrease the burden on the patients and health care providers in the form of a stay in the hospital and minimize wasting laboratory resources.
This study compares insulin icodec (a new insulin taken once a week) to insulin degludec (an insulin taken once daily which is already available on the market) in people with type 2 diabetes. The study will look at how well insulin icodec taken weekly controls blood sugar compared to insulin degludec taken daily. Participants will get their study medicine in an injection pen. Participants will get a pen for weekly injection and one for daily injection. One will be icodec or degludec and the other will be dummy medicine. The treatment participants get is decided by chance. Participants and the study staff will not know which active medicine they get. The insulin is injected with a needle in a skin fold in the thigh. The study could last for about 8 months. Participants will have 13 clinic visits and 17 phone calls with the study doctor. At 8 clinic visits participants will have blood samples taken. At 4 clinic visits participants cannot eat or drink (except for water) for 8 hours before the visit. Women cannot take part if pregnant, breast-feeding or plan to become pregnant during the study period.
Evaluation of the Safety and Effectiveness of the Dexcom Glucose Monitoring (CGM) System
People with serious mental illness (SMI) such as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder and bipolar affective disorder have a significantly reduced life expectancy, caused in part by increased incidences of mortality from physical health conditions such as cardiovascular disease (CVD) and diabetes. Electronic clinical decision support systems (eCDSS) offer clinicians patient-specific advice and recommendations based on clinical guidelines, theoretically overcoming obstacles in the use of existing paper-based guidelines. Adoption of eCDSS to address CVD risk in people with SMI presents a unique opportunity for research, but requires evidence of acceptability and feasibility before scaling up of research. The key objective of this study is to establish the feasibility and acceptability of an eCDSS (CogStack @ Maudsley) compromising a real-time electronic health record powered alerting and clinical decision support system for diabetes management in secondary inpatient mental healthcare settings. End-users of the eCDSS will be clinicians only. Firstly we will conduct initial surveys and interviews with clinicians on inpatient wards to scope experiences of managing diabetes in secondary mental healthcare settings and attitudes towards use of digital technologies to aid in clinical decision making. A feasibility study will then be run to evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of implementing eCDSS on inpatient wards. This will involve a cluster RCT on inpatient general adult psychiatry wards, where 4 months of eCDSS use by clinicians on intervention wards will be compared to 4 months of treatment as usual on control wards. All clinicians on recruited wards will be eligible to participate. At the end of the study, participating clinicians on intervention wards will be invited to take part in a survey and interview which will explore their experiences and attitudes towards using the eCDSS, and an implementation science framework will be applied to inform future implementation of eCDSS. Group level pseudonymised outcome data will be gathered through a separate study.