Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Diabetes poses a substantial burden to racial/ethnic minorities and in populations with limited access to healthcare. However, there is a shortage of healthcare providers available to help patients adopt the lifestyle changes required for diabetes control. The goal of the present study is to evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of a diabetes self-care intervention delivered by medical students to patients with poorly controlled diabetes. Training medical students to use proven communication techniques to help patients identify and overcome barriers to adopting lifestyle changes in diabetes is a novel but plausible strategy. The investigators anticipate that findings from our pilot study will be used to develop a larger study to definitively test the program's effectiveness. A long-term benefit of our program is that future healthcare providers are practicing the skills needed to promote positive lifestyle changes and provide care for chronic conditions in diverse communities.


Clinical Trial Description

Diabetes and its complications pose a substantial physical, psychological and financial burden on the large number of racial/ethnic minorities and other socioeconomically deprived persons with diabetes. However, self-management goals are often not met in racial/ethnic minorities and in populations with fewer socioeconomic resources. In response, our research team has developed a novel "health coaching" intervention to promote diabetes self-management in the community. Health coaching is based on Control Systems Theory and helps patients to: 1) identify problems in self-care behaviors; 2) create dynamic plans for correcting these issues; and, 3) learn to navigate the complexities of everyday life and to achieve clinically and personally desirable outcomes. The primary innovation of the present project is that first-year medical students are trained to serve as the health coaches, and are participating in the study Coaching for Control (STU00069506). The objective of our pilot study is to test whether 20 patients from five Northwestern Medicine primary care practice groups (two in the Austin community, two at Northwestern Memorial Hospital and one at Norwegian American Hospital) enrolled in the "Coaching for Control" intervention experience favorable changes in clinical and behavioral outcomes after 16 weeks as compared with an equal number of patients from those same clinics who are not enrolled in the program. We will use a non-randomized trial design to carry out the following aims: 1. Determine whether patients with diabetes who participate in the "Coaching for Control" behavioral intervention program (i.e., the intervention arm) have lower hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) after four months than patients who do not participate in the program (i.e., the control arm). 2. Determine whether diabetes patients in the intervention arm report higher task-related self-efficacy for initiating and maintaining recommended diabetes self-care behaviors than participants in the control arm. We hypothesize that participants in the intervention arm will have more favorable HbA1c and report higher self-efficacy for diabetes self-care behaviors than participants in the control arm. Secondary objectives are to test whether these changes persist 8 months after the program ends and to test whether we observe changes in additional clinical measures such as blood pressure, waist circumference, and in self-reported health behaviors such as medication adherence, self-care behaviors, physical activity and diet. Process evaluations through focus groups and interviews with participants will allow us to refine our intervention. The translational aspects of our proposal include the application of a proven intervention to promote diabetes self-care in a community setting that includes adults at high risk for diabetes complications. Findings from the present pilot study will be used to justify expansion of the study to a larger group of community members so that we can carry out a larger randomized trial of efficacy. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Supportive Care


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01695278
Study type Interventional
Source Northwestern University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 3
Start date September 2012
Completion date August 2014

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Active, not recruiting NCT05666479 - CGM Monitoring in T2DM Patients Undergoing Orthopaedic Replacement Surgery
Completed NCT05647083 - The Effect of Massage on Diabetic Parameters N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05661799 - Persistence of Physical Activity in People With Type 2 Diabetes Over Time. N/A
Completed NCT03686722 - Effect of Co-administration of Metformin and Daclatasvir on the Pharmacokinetis and Pharmacodynamics of Metformin Phase 1
Completed NCT02836704 - Comparison of Standard vs Higher Starting Dose of Insulin Glargine in Chinese Patients With Type 2 Diabetes (Glargine Starting Dose) Phase 4
Completed NCT01819129 - Efficacy and Safety of FIAsp Compared to Insulin Aspart in Combination With Insulin Glargine and Metformin in Adults With Type 2 Diabetes Phase 3
Completed NCT04562714 - Impact of Flash Glucose Monitoring in People With Type 2 Diabetes Using Non-Insulin Antihyperglycemic Therapy N/A
Completed NCT02009488 - Treatment Differences Between Canagliflozin and Placebo in Insulin Secretion in Subjects With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) Phase 1
Completed NCT05896319 - Hyaluronic Acid Treatment of the Post-extraction Tooth Socket Healing in Subjects With Diabetes Mellitus Type 2 N/A
Recruiting NCT05598203 - Effect of Nutrition Education Groups in the Treatment of Patients With Type 2 Diabetes N/A
Completed NCT05046873 - A Research Study Looking Into Blood Levels of Semaglutide and NNC0480-0389 When Given in the Same Injection or in Two Separate Injections in Healthy People Phase 1
Terminated NCT04090242 - Impact of App Based Diabetes Training Program in Conjunction With the BD Nano Pen Needle in People With T2 Diabetes N/A
Completed NCT04030091 - Pulsatile Insulin Infusion Therapy in Patients With Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Phase 4
Completed NCT03620357 - Continuous Glucose Monitoring & Management In Type 2 Diabetes (T2D) N/A
Completed NCT03604224 - A Study to Observe Clinical Effectiveness of Canagliflozin 300 mg Containing Treatment Regimens in Indian Type 2 Diabetes Participants With BMI>25 kg/m^2, in Real World Clinical Setting
Completed NCT01696266 - An International Survey on Hypoglycaemia Among Insulin-treated Patients With Diabetes
Completed NCT03620890 - Detemir Versus NPH for Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in Pregnancy Phase 4
Withdrawn NCT05473286 - A Research Study Looking at How Oral Semaglutide Works in People With Type 2 Diabetes in Germany, as Part of Local Clinical Practice
Not yet recruiting NCT05029804 - Effect of Walking Exercise Training on Adherence to Disease Management and Metabolic Control in Diabetes N/A
Completed NCT04531631 - Effects of Dorzagliatin on 1st Phase Insulin and Beta-cell Glucose Sensitivity in T2D and Monogenic Diabetes Phase 2