Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 Clinical Trial
Official title:
Impact of Food Distribution at Low-income Clinics on Health Outcomes of Patients With Diabetes
To compare the effectiveness of providing monthly boxes of nutritious foods to low-income patients with diabetes on site at Free Clinics with referrals to off-site food pantries on diabetes related health outcomes
It is hypothesized that providing healthy foods may stabilize unhealthy eating patterns for
diabetics so that HbA1c measurements significantly improve. The UCSD Student-Run Free Clinic
Project (SRFCP) will offer boxes of nutritious food monthly along with a brief nutrition
class to its diabetic patients and continue their otherwise usual care. The UCSD SRFCP will
partner with a large food bank, Feeding America San Diego, that can provide monthly food
boxes of healthy food along with education about eating healthy on a budget. Food insecurity
negatively impacts health outcomes in diabetic patients; therefore enhancing food security
with nutritious food as well as providing education to cultivate healthy eating habits could
be a cost-effective way to improve health outcomes in diabetics, necessitating the use of
human subjects for this study. Blood pressure, weight, and LDL cholesterol will be secondary
outcome measures along with survey measures for diabetes distress, depression, dietary
quality assessment, medication adherence, hypoglycemia, and food security.
Diabetics who enroll in this study will be randomly assigned to an initial 3-month period of
either immediate intervention (the food boxes and education) or a wait list control group.
The intervention involves receiving a box of nutritious food each month along with brief
education provided by food pantry staff, in addition to usual medical care. In measuring
clinical outcomes, this study will not deviate from routine care.
As a part of routine care screening, all UCSD SRFCP patients will receive the six-item 'Short
Form' of the USDA Food Security Survey Module to assess their food security upon arrival in
the waiting area. This survey will be self-administered or orally administered depending on
patient preference. Regardless of food security status, everyone will be offered referral to
local food banks and referral for Cal-Fresh (Food Stamps) application if eligible.
All patients who receive care at the UCSD SRFCP sites with a diagnosis of diabetes,
regardless of food security status, will be offered these same resources in addition to being
informed of this study. The investigators will track health outcomes from routine clinical
visits by querying the electronic health records if patients chose to participate in the
study. Participants will also be asked to complete a survey at baseline, 3 months, 6 months,
and 9 months (for the wait list group). Those who are interested in the study will speak with
a study coordinator and be provided a detailed discussion about the study.
Once the study is fully explained and ample time is given for patients to make a
well-informed decision, the informed consent will be obtained in a private room or space with
study coordinators fluent in the patient's preferred language (English or Spanish) who are
capable of answering questions about the study. The informed consent forms will be provided
in English and Spanish. It will be made clear to patients that they are under no obligation
to participate and that refusal to participate in no way influences the routine care they
receive at the UCSD SRFCP.
If patients choose to participate in the study, after signing the informed consent, patients
will then complete the 'Pre Survey,' which includes measures for diabetes distress,
medication adherence, depression, dietary assessment, and hypoglycemia. This is available in
English and Spanish, and it can also be self-administered or orally administered depending on
patient preference.
A wait list study design allows for comparison between the immediate intervention arm and the
wait list intervention arm to isolate the diabetes food boxes as the variable responsible for
patient improvement, while still allowing all patients who are interested to receive the
nutritious food boxes on site free of charge. After patient enrollment and completion of the
'Pre Survey', participants will be randomized into either an immediate intervention arm, in
which they will receive food and nutrition education within a month, at the next available
monthly food distribution and nutrition education session, or they will be enrolled in the
delayed intervention arm when they will begin the food distribution and nutrition classes 3
months later. The UCSD SRFCP diabetic patients' routine appointments are typically scheduled
about every three months so this would be after their next scheduled routine appointment.
Realistically patient visits do not fall exactly 90 days later, so any visit data or lab
results nearest to the baseline, 3 month, 6 month, and 9 month time frames can be included in
assessing outcomes for this study.
To determine sample size, we examined 3-month data from a previous UCSD clinical trial
conducted by Dr. Cheryl Rock in subjects with type 2 diabetes (Rock et al. Diabetes Care
2014;37:1573). Assuming mean (SD) HbA1c% reduction from baseline of 0.68 (1.02)% in immediate
intervention, and 0.0 (0.88)% in the wait list control group, there is 97% power with a
dropout/nonadherence rate of up to 40% to see a group difference at 3 months if we assign 100
patients to immediate intervention and 100 to wait list control patients for a total of 200
patients under study.
Analysis will examine longitudinal changes over 3 months in HbA1c% (the primary outcome
variable) and secondary outcome variables (e.g., weight), which will be extracted from
medical records, allowing for a 45-day window before or after the 3-month time point.
Statistical analyses will be conducted using SPSS. Any missing data will be imputed and
primary analysis will be intent to treat. The investigators will use t-tests and χ2 analyses
to assess between-group baseline differences. Baseline variables that differ between arms
will be controlled for in subsequent analysis. Outcomes will be transformed as needed to
better approximate Gaussian distributions or analyzed non-parametrically. Analyses evaluating
intervention effects will be conducted at the 2-sided 5% significance level. The
investigators will perform 2-sample t-tests and repeated measures analyses using linear mixed
models to examine between-group differences and paired t-tests to examine within-subject
changes. Likelihood ratio tests will be used to assess significance of model terms;
covariates deemed to be imbalanced across randomization arms will be controlled for in the
models.
Participants in the immediate and the waitlist arms of the study will ultimately both receive
food for the same duration of time (6 months).
There are approximately 200 patients with diabetes, predominantly Latinos, receiving care at
the UCSD SRFCP and the investigators wanted to ensure that any patient with diabetes
receiving medical care at the SRFCP could enter the study to receive additional food
resources onsite. The investigators have a commitment from Feeding America San Diego of food
for 200 patients for the duration of the study. The initial enrollment period is estimated to
be 3-6 months. Participants will receive carts to facilitate carrying home the box of food.
Brief educational sessions led by food pantry staff will also be utilized to empower patients
to continue making informed decisions about their health and nutrition after the study ends.
These sessions will be led by a bilingual person, fluent in Spanish and English. Example
recipes and nutritional pamphlets will also be provided in the diabetes boxes. The
investigators would like participants will eat the food that is being provided, although it
is understood that it may also be used for immediate family members who are eating meals with
the participant. Food insecurity is measured routinely only at the household level, therefore
it is appropriate to try to raise the household food insecurity as part of this study.
The 'Post Survey' will also be administered at 3 months, at 6 months, and (for the waitlisted
group) at 9 months during the educational sessions. The 'Post survey' consists of the same
questions from the 'Pre Survey' plus the questions from the initial USDA Food Security
screening.
All participants will be assigned to unique study identification numbers in order to
de-identify patients' medical information. The de-identified dataset will be entered into
ishare, a UCSD password-secure website utilized by the SRFCP, or REDCap, a secure website and
research tool for managing surveys and databases. Permission to view the folders containing
the de-identified database will be limited only to those directly involved in this study.
This de-identified dataset will then be subject to statistical analysis without the potential
of a link being made back to the patient's medical record with private health information.
Data analysis and interpretation will be from the de-identified data only.
Finally, there are plans to assist participants to continue to eat foods like that which is
provided in the study, and the barriers that participants face are both fiscal and
knowledge-based. First, Feeding America San Diego has agreed to continue to provide healthful
diabetes food boxes after the conclusion of the study for any interested participants.
Second, the education that is included in this study is designed around empowering
participants to continue to make healthy food choices on a budget. It is hoped that, by
exposure to budget-friendly and healthy foods, participants will continue to make these same
healthy and affordable food choices when doing their own grocery shopping. Third, at the
beginning of this project, an objective is to not only enroll participants in this study but
also to expose all UCSD Student-run Free Clinic Project (SRFCP) patients to the other
available resources, such as facilitation with Food Stamps (Cal-Fresh) enrollment as well as
local food bank distributions in patients' neighborhoods. Feeding America San Diego, for
example, has over 100 food bank sites throughout San Diego. Therefore, food resources will
persist once the study has finished, hopefully leaving participants with lasting nutrition
education as well as connections with Cal-Fresh and food banks. Making this a successful
transition will be an emphasis of the research team throughout the study.
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