Diabetes Clinical Trial
Official title:
Incentives in Diabetic Eye Assessment by Screening (IDEAS) Trial
This trial is a randomised controlled trial to assess whether annual attendance rates at diabetic eye screening appointments in Kensington, Chelsea and Westminster could be improved by offering invitees a small financial incentive. The research questions are: 1. Are incentives an effective strategy to encourage participation in the screening programme? 2. Does the design of the financial incentive scheme affect its effectiveness in influencing participation in health screening? 3. Does the choice of incentive scheme, if successful, attract patients who have a different demographic or socioeconomic status to those who attend screening regularly? 4. Is offering these incentives a cost-effective strategy for enhancing participation?
An increasing emphasis is being placed on preventative healthcare in the NHS (National Health Service). Screening programmes currently exist in many clinical areas including diabetic retinopathy as well as breast cancer, cervical cancer and cardiovascular disease. In many contexts the benefits of health screening are well documented, but concerns exist about the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of such programmes as uptake to screening may be very poor in some, generally hard to reach, communities. There are many ways of trying to encourage participation in health promoting activities and it is likely real shifts in behaviour will only come about with a mix of strategies. In this study we set out to see if we can improve screening rates in London, which has both high and low levels of deprivation and specific populations with poor attendance. The ultimate success of a high-quality screening program depends on the uptake rate of the population and novel solutions are required to meet the challenge of achieving this. Diabetes is an increasing public health concern worldwide. There are 2.9 million people diagnosed with diabetes in the UK (United Kingdom) and an estimated 850,000 people who have the condition but are not recognised. Whilst the rates of other vascular risk factors such as hypertension, smoking and hypercholesterolaemia are falling, the rates of diabetes in the UK are rising. This is despite the co-ordinated efforts of primary and secondary care prevention programmes. All patients with diabetes are at risk of developing diabetic retinopathy. This condition is caused by the microscopic damage to small blood vessels to the eye. There is proliferation (growth) of these vessels and these new fragile vessels may bleed and destroy the retina leading to sight loss. It is estimated that in England every year 4,200 people are at risk of blindness caused by diabetic retinopathy and there are 1,280 new cases of blindness caused by diabetic retinopathy. It is the leading cause of sight loss in the UK in the working population and therefore there is a significant social and financial burden associated with the condition. However with timely diagnosis and treatment the risk of blindness can be dramatically reduced. As this condition may well remain silent until catastrophic late manifestations of the disease are evident, the need for an effective screening programme is obvious. The National Screening programme was implemented in England between 2003 and 2006. This involves an annual retinal digital photographic screening offered to all people aged 12 years and older diagnosed with type 1 and type 2 diabetes. The test involves administration of eye drops to the eye and a photograph of the retina taken without contact with the eye. The success of this screening programme is without contest. In 2011-2012, 2,587,000 people in England aged 12 and over were identified with diabetes and over 90% were offered screening for diabetic retinopathy. 1,911,000 received screening which equates to an uptake of 81%. However there is significant variability in uptake in differing areas. Although screening is offered in multiple locations including GP (general practice) surgeries and hospitals, the poor uptake of screening in socially deprived areas is well documented. For example, in Gloucestershire, with each increasing quintile of deprivation, diabetes prevalence increases (odds ratio 0.84), the probability of having been screened for diabetic retinopathy decreases (odds ratio 1.11), and the prevalence of sight-threatening diabetic retinopathy among screened patients increases also (odds ratio of 0.98). Since the effectiveness of any screening programme is intimately linked to the uptake by the population (and in particular uptake by those most at risk), simple, inexpensive and cost effective strategies are required by the NHS to influence population health behaviours in domains where choices are often in sharp contrast to underlying intentions. This has relevance to diabetic retinopathy screening but also more widely as we increasingly try to prevent disease rather than simply treat it. Incentives are central to economics and are used across the public and private sectors to influence behaviour. Psychological phenomena from behavioural economics allow us to design incentive-based interventions that are more effective at delivering improved outcomes. Personal incentives have been used to motivate patients and general populations to change their behaviour. Examples of behaviours targeted include smoking and drug use cessation. Incentives can include cash, vouchers or benefits-in-kind and they can have a profound effect on individual behaviour at a relatively small cost. Interest in offering incentives to foster healthier lifestyles has increased, as the full economic and social costs of bad choices and unhealthy behaviour have become apparent. Incentives have previously been used to improve cancer screening rates, but they have been targeted at the providers of the service rather than people invited to attend for screening. Financial incentives have been seen to be more effective in increasing performance of infrequent behaviours (e.g. vaccinations) rather than in more sustained behaviours (e.g. smoking). As screening usually requires discrete one-off behaviours, incentives may be particularly effective in increasing their uptake. A wider use of incentives in public health interventions is a more recent phenomenon and has attracted controversy and concerns about whether they are effective (and cost effective) or not. This study will provide evidence to policy makers about the role of different incentive schemes in encouraging health promoting behaviours. We do not suggest that providing incentives is the only answer to encouraging screening participation, but if we demonstrate good evidence that they are effective (and cost effective), their targeted application may be indicated. Equally demonstration that incentives of this type are not effective may prevent unnecessary financial loss from the NHS if wider rollout of such programmes is considered. ;
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