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Clinical Trial Summary

People with severe mental illness (SMI), defined as psychotic and bipolar disorders, die 17-20 years earlier than the general population, the most common cause of death being cardiovascular diseases (CVD). The major contributor to CVD mortality in SMI is the increased prevalence of type 2 diabetes (T2D) compared to the general population. T2D is a paradigm of a single condition that progresses to multiple conditions. T2D requires annual reviews of 9 diabetes care processes and for patients to adopt multiple self-care tasks to prevent diabetes complications. The 9 diabetes care processes include: 3-6 monthly blood glucose measurement (HbA1c) with appropriate targets; blood pressure measurements and targets depending on diabetes complication status; annual blood cholesterol measurement; kidney function testing with urinary albumin; kidney function testing with serum creatinine; weight check; smoking status; diabetes annual eye screening; and annual foot examination. In the National Diabetes Audit 2016-17, people with SMI and T2D were 10% less likely to take up all 9 diabetes care processes and have worse glycaemic control as a result. Therefore the aim of this study is to determine who is receiving these care processes and to develop new care pathways/interventions that support this population. This project is a cross-sectional study and will take place in Lambeth south London, an area with high prevalence of SMI, and therefore T2D, and deprivation. W aim to profile the entire population of people with SMI and T2D within the Hills Brook and Dales and StockWELL Primary Care Networks. The investigators will access the participants medical records and record details of their latest physical health assessment and ask them to complete 7 validated questionnaires and brief informal interview either face to face in their GP surgery or over the phone. This project has been funded by the Burdett Trust for Nursing.


Clinical Trial Description

The practice manager at each participating GP practices will run a combined search using read codes for SMI and for type 2 diabetes on the Egton Medical Information System (EMIS) electronic patient record. This will generate a list/register of all the people who potentially meet the study inclusion criteria. Next GPs or practice staff will invite the potentially eligible to participate in the study by sending them a letter and the participant information sheet. The participant will be asked to contact the research team if they would like to participate or have any further questions. If they agree to the study they receive an information sheet and consent form and will have the opportunity to ask the research team about the study. It is expected that the total of eligible participants will be 578 from HBD and 472 for StockWELL PCN. This is because HBD PCN have a total of 57,863 patients and StockWELL have 47,199. Type 2 diabetes prevalence for Lambeth is around 5% and there are 5253 people with diabetes from the 2 PCNs which means that based on the estimated prevalence of SMI and T2D in primary care of 20%, the total population of potentially eligible participants will be in the region of 1,000. It is anticipated that 20% of people will respond to the study invitation which would mean a total population of around 200 and depending on the time available to recruit participants and the rate at which GP practices join the study and run the searches, the investigators aim to recruit at least 120 within the study period. This will be a population-based cross-sectional survey of the total population of people with SMI and T2D registered with HBD PCN and StockWELL PCN. The research team will carry out a case note review of identifiable electronic medical records at the clinical site, information that will be selected will include the date of both diagnoses, duration of both diagnoses and medication history after consent has been obtained. This information will be written in a pseudoanonymised case report form with an ID number replacing patient identifiers and will then be kept in a locked filling cabinet in James Clerk Maxwell Building, King's College London. The research team will ask the participant to complete 7 validated questionnaires (Diabetes Distress Scale, International Physical Activity Scale, Quality of Life Scale, self-report Global Assessment of Functioning, Alcohol Usage Disorders Identification Test, Drug Abuse Screening Test and Empower Up). This will be done either over the phone or in person and the participants GP surgery, depending on their preference. The GP Practice will be asked to conduct a routine physical health assessment on the participant, if they have not had one in the last 3 months. This would be part of their routine clinical care and consist of HbA1c (mmol/mol); BP (mmHg); eGFR (mL/min); cholesterol (mmol/mol); BMI (m/kg2). The research worker will then conduct a brief interview, they will rate the severity of psychiatric symptoms using a validated rating scale and they will discuss how the participant accesses support for diabetes self-management, whether they have any experience of digital interventions and their thoughts on them and finally, preferences on where and how, they receive their diabetes support. This will be carried out either over the phone or in person, depending on the participants preference and will take about 30 minutes. If the participant lacks capacity to consent, they will be asked to consent again in a few weeks to see whether capacity has been restored. If the participant still lacks capacity or they lose capacity during the study, the participant or clinical team will be asked to elect a personal or professional and consultee. The research team will contact them and ask if they are happy to consent on the participants behalf. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05456984
Study type Observational [Patient Registry]
Source King's College London
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date May 3, 2022
Completion date August 10, 2022