Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
| NCT number |
NCT03950219 |
| Other study ID # |
CUSTOM |
| Secondary ID |
|
| Status |
Recruiting |
| Phase |
|
| First received |
|
| Last updated |
|
| Start date |
March 1, 2019 |
| Est. completion date |
October 2022 |
Study information
| Verified date |
October 2020 |
| Source |
Steno Diabetes Center Copenhagen |
| Contact |
Nana F Hempler, PhD |
| Phone |
+45 40732591 |
| Email |
nana.folmann.hempler[@]regionh.dk |
| Is FDA regulated |
No |
| Health authority |
|
| Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The CUSTOM research project represents a complex intervention. The project aim of the
intervention is, through the delivery of culturally sensitive Diabetes self-management
education and support, to support ethnic minorities with type 2 diabetes in making
health-promoting decisions about their care and gaining insight into their goals, values and
motivation to improve their daily diabetes self-management. The target group comprises ethnic
minorities whose native language is Arabic, Urdu or Turkish.
Description:
The CUSTOM research project represents a complex intervention. The project aim of the
intervention is, through the delivery of culturally sensitive DSMES, to support ethnic
minorities with type 2 diabetes in making health-promoting decisions about their care and
gaining insight into their goals, values and motivation to improve their daily diabetes
self-management. The target group comprises ethnic minorities whose native language is
Arabic, Urdu or Turkish. The intervention has been developed in collaboration with the target
group and health care professionals from Centre for Diabetes (CfD) in Copenhagen
Municipality.
CUSTOM will explore feasibility and effectiveness of the intervention including the
mechanisms through which outcomes occur and contexts where outcomes are likely to be
replicable. The intervention builds on the framework of complex interventions(26), and is
designed as an pragmatic randomised controlled trial in three arms.
Focus on fidelity, appropriateness and acceptability of the developed intervention.
- What factors and structures are necessary to facilitate DSMES access and retention among
the target group?
- Which methods and tools supporting diabetes decision making and problem solving are
acceptable and feasible among the target group?
- What educational strategies promote Health Care Professionals' (HCPs') communication
with the target group?
Focus on exploring effectiveness of the intervention, the mechanisms through which outcomes
occur and contexts where outcomes are likely to be replicable.
- To what extent does the intervention lead to better outcomes (e.g., HbA1c and
participant-reported outcomes) than 'usual care' for the target group and what
mechanisms for the effect of the intervention can be identified? And are there
differences according to the setting, of which the intervention is delivered; a) in a
community health centre and b) a local community setting.
- What characterizes contexts that are most conducive to positive outcomes?
- What barriers and possibilities exist related to implementing culturally sensitive DSMES
in different municipal settings targeting ethnic minority groups?
- Which contextual factors determine whether the identified mechanisms lead to intended
outcomes?
- What are the long-term effects of the intervention on measured outcomes?
Study design CUSTOM is considered a complex intervention due to many interacting components
in its design, complex behaviour changes in those delivering and receiving the intervention,
many stakeholders, and highly variable outcomes. The trial will be undertaken as a pragmatic
trial using cluster randomisation.
The trial will be tested in three arms: Participants will be randomised into 3 arms Group A:
Centre for Diabetes, Copenhagen Municipality, n = 103 Group B: Local community setting in
Tingbjerg, Copenhagen Municipality, n = 103 Group C: Usual care in the west area of
Copenhagen, municipalities of Høje-Taastrup, Hvidovre, Albertslund, Brøndby and Ishøj, n =
103 Figure 1 Study Design 9. Interventions 9.1 Group A and B: Group A and B will receive the
same interventions but in different contexts - a local community setting and a diabetes care
centre. The intervention will be pilot tested in the local community and if necessary
adjusted to local contexts.
Using a design-based research, the intervention has been developed in collaboration with
researchers, the target group and healthcare professionals from Centre for Diabetes (CfD) in
Copenhagen Municipality.
The group-based course will include 6 sessions of approximately 3 hours. Sessions are
constructed around themes such as; diabetes knowledge and complication, mental health, diet,
physical activity, Ramadan, medicine and include practical exercises such as blood sugar
measurements, walking etc. The healthcare professionals delivering the education consists of
an interdisciplinary team of both a nurse, dietitian, physiotherapist, a translator and a
peer educator.
The CUSTOM intervention consists of three elements: philosophy/values, educator behaviours
and 12 specific dialogue tools. These three elements are all equally important in the
organisation and completion of a good and culturally sensitive diabetes education targeting
ethnic minorities. The intervention is based on the concept CUSTOM which is developed with
regards to the healthcare professionals' approaches, methods and existing educational
activities. The concept consists of 12 health education tools accompanied by a comprehensive
guide. The success of the tools developed in CUSTOM rely on the values held by the suppliers
of the education and by the health care professional's competences to apply the specific
dialogue tools.