Hypertension Clinical Trial
Official title:
Impact of Nurse Case Management on Diabetes Co-morbidities
Verified date | February 2019 |
Source | Milton S. Hershey Medical Center |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Although strong clinical evidence exists that patients with diabetes should achieve certain
clinical goals (i.e. HbA1C, BP, LDL, etc.), to reduce morbidity and mortality national
surveys indicate that only a minority of people with diabetes achieves these goals.
Hypothesis: combination of nurse case management and enhanced behavior change counseling will
improve outcomes for glycemic control, blood pressure and cholesterol in high risk patients
with Type 2 diabetes when compared to usual care over a 3 year period.
Study design- The study will be a three year randomized control trial that will select
patients that have either A1C >8.5, LDL >130, or BP >140/90. Nurse case managers, trained in
clinical guidelines and brief behavior change counseling techniques (motivational
interviewing), will aim to foster patient adherence in the experimental group patients. Nurse
case managers will use standing orders to set an implementation of clinical guidelines (for
diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia and depression) with individual follow up.
A total of 820 patients between the all 9 (6 Hershey Medical Center and 3 Reading Hospital
affiliated clinics) will be sought. One third of the study patients will be recruited from
the underserved Hispanic population in the Reading area. Patients will be randomized by
physician i.e. one physician will be randomly assigned to have all their patients co-managed
by a nurse case manager; the other will have usual care without any contact with nurse case
manager.
Nurses will be trained and then initiate a small pilot study in July thru August. Full
recruitment and initiation of study will begin in September 2006.
Clinic Activities - Each nurse will be responsible for 3 clinics. Nurses will work under the
supervision of the primary care physicians. A set of clinical guidelines will be developed
with physician input that will serve as the over-riding framework for the nurses.
Outcomes - Over a three-year period the investigators will evaluate clinical response
(improvements in A1C, BP, LDL, and depression when present) as well as a series of other
measures that will be obtained by surveys (patient satisfaction, quality of life,
self-management behaviors). Provider satisfaction will be measured using a standardized tool.
Finally, cost effectiveness of the intervention and evaluation of the potential barriers to
implementation will be studied.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 550 |
Est. completion date | July 27, 2011 |
Est. primary completion date | July 27, 2011 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Type 2 diabetes - age > 18 years old who are at high risk based on any one of the following criteria: - HbA1C > 8.5 - LDL > 130 - BP > 140/90 within the last 6 months Exclusion Criteria: - patients who are pregnant upon entry in the study (however if a patient becomes pregnant in the course of the study, she can continue with the study) - unable to communicate in either English or Spanish - in nursing homes (and therefore unable to attend outpatient visits) |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Penn State College of Medicine | Hershey | Pennsylvania |
United States | Reading Hospital | Reading | Pennsylvania |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Milton S. Hershey Medical Center | National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) |
United States,
Gabbay RA, Lendel I, Saleem TM, Shaeffer G, Adelman AM, Mauger DT, Collins M, Polomano RC. Nurse case management improves blood pressure, emotional distress and diabetes complication screening. Diabetes Res Clin Pract. 2006 Jan;71(1):28-35. Epub 2005 Jul 12. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | % of patients reaching goal HbA1C (<7) | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Primary | % of patients with BP goal (<130/80) | Two years after enrollment | ||
Primary | % of patients with LDL at goal (<100) | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Primary | % of patients at goal for all three parameters (HbA1C <7, BP <130/80, LDL <100) | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Secondary | % of patients with yearly ophthalmologic exam | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Secondary | % of patients with yearly foot exam | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Secondary | % of patients with assessment for nephropathy | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Secondary | % of patients with nephropathy on ACE inhibitor or ARB | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Secondary | % of patients on aspirin | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Secondary | % of patients at or above CES-D depression score 16 for severe depression | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Secondary | Change in weight | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Secondary | Emotional distress (PAID survey) | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Secondary | Diabetes specific quality of life (ADD QOL) | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Secondary | Diabetes self care activities survey | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Secondary | Patient satisfaction survey (DTSQ) | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Secondary | Costs and cost-effectiveness | 2 years after enrollment | ||
Secondary | Physician satisfaction - survey filled out by physician | 2 years after enrollment |
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