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Can primary care team-based transition to insulin improve outcomes in adults with type 2 diabetes: the stepping up to insulin cluster randomized controlled trial protocol

Can primary care team-based transition to insulin improve outcomes in adults with type 2 diabetes: the stepping up to insulin cluster randomized controlled trial protocol
Can primary care team-based transition to insulin improve outcomes in adults with type 2 diabetes: the stepping up to insulin cluster randomized controlled trial protocol
Background

Type 2 diabetes (T2D) brings significant human and healthcare costs. Its progressive nature means achieving normoglycaemia is increasingly difficult, yet critical to avoiding long term vascular complications. Nearly one-half of people with T2D have glycaemic levels out of target. Insulin is effective in achieving glycaemic targets, yet initiation of insulin is often delayed, particularly in primary care. Given limited access to specialist resources and the size of the diabetes epidemic, primary care is where insulin initiation must become part of routine practice. This would also support integrated holistic care for people with diabetes. Our Stepping Up Program is based on a general practitioner (GP) and practice nurse (PN) model of care supported appropriately by endocrinologists and credentialed diabetes educator-registered nurses. Pilot work suggests the model facilitates integration of the technical work of insulin initiation within ongoing generalist care.

Methods

This protocol is for a cluster randomized controlled trial to examine the effectiveness of the Stepping Up Program to enhance the role of the GP-PN team in initiating insulin and improving glycaemic outcomes for people with T2D. 224 patients between the ages of 18 and 80 years with T2D, on two or more oral hypoglycaemic agents and with an HbA1c ?7.5% in the last six months will be recruited from 74 general practices. The unit of randomization is the practice.

Primary outcome is change in glycated haemoglobin HbA1c (measured as a continuous variable). We hypothesize that the intervention arm will achieve an absolute HbA1c mean difference of 0.5% lower than control group at 12 months follow up. Secondary outcomes include the number of participants who successfully transfer to insulin and the proportion who achieve HbA1c measurement of <7.0%. We will also collect data on patient psychosocial outcomes and healthcare utilization and costs.

Discussion

The study is a pragmatic translational study with important potential implications for people with T2D, healthcare professionals and funders of healthcare though making better use of scarce healthcare resources, improving timely access to therapy that can improve disease outcomes.
type 2 diabetes, primary care, nursing, randomized trial, insulin, implementation, australia, health services research
1-8
Furler, John S.
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Young, Doris
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Best, James
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Patterson, Elizabeth
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O’Neal, David
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Liew, Danny
276d2000-e6a8-4ef2-b45c-c0318a36d3fd
Speight, Jane
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Segal, Leonie
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May, Carl
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Manski-Nankervis, Jo-Anne
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Holmes-Truscott, Elizabeth
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Ginnivan, Louise
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Blackberry, Irene D.
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Furler, John S.
6b30f7b9-113a-4b27-a81b-b1670639373a
Young, Doris
d47222a7-6fb3-450e-8121-9400d64a3cd9
Best, James
d8d70de9-5032-452b-8c38-b553c7ef03fd
Patterson, Elizabeth
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O’Neal, David
a6a768bb-8f5d-4485-9714-8e6075e03857
Liew, Danny
276d2000-e6a8-4ef2-b45c-c0318a36d3fd
Speight, Jane
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Segal, Leonie
a4b8fb47-1dce-4b4f-a05a-2fc282403a9d
May, Carl
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Manski-Nankervis, Jo-Anne
adbce839-2e80-4b20-b99c-e417a40eac12
Holmes-Truscott, Elizabeth
306e4943-e890-4d35-bfdf-3270d6939ce7
Ginnivan, Louise
4977e102-9ba4-4fa6-ad75-048d72b6c6f7
Blackberry, Irene D.
85677b0f-3360-4021-a2a3-1776393e07f9

Furler, John S., Young, Doris, Best, James, Patterson, Elizabeth, O’Neal, David, Liew, Danny, Speight, Jane, Segal, Leonie, May, Carl, Manski-Nankervis, Jo-Anne, Holmes-Truscott, Elizabeth, Ginnivan, Louise and Blackberry, Irene D. (2014) Can primary care team-based transition to insulin improve outcomes in adults with type 2 diabetes: the stepping up to insulin cluster randomized controlled trial protocol. Implementation Science, 9 (20), 1-8. (doi:10.1186/1748-5908-9-20). (PMID:24528528)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background

Type 2 diabetes (T2D) brings significant human and healthcare costs. Its progressive nature means achieving normoglycaemia is increasingly difficult, yet critical to avoiding long term vascular complications. Nearly one-half of people with T2D have glycaemic levels out of target. Insulin is effective in achieving glycaemic targets, yet initiation of insulin is often delayed, particularly in primary care. Given limited access to specialist resources and the size of the diabetes epidemic, primary care is where insulin initiation must become part of routine practice. This would also support integrated holistic care for people with diabetes. Our Stepping Up Program is based on a general practitioner (GP) and practice nurse (PN) model of care supported appropriately by endocrinologists and credentialed diabetes educator-registered nurses. Pilot work suggests the model facilitates integration of the technical work of insulin initiation within ongoing generalist care.

Methods

This protocol is for a cluster randomized controlled trial to examine the effectiveness of the Stepping Up Program to enhance the role of the GP-PN team in initiating insulin and improving glycaemic outcomes for people with T2D. 224 patients between the ages of 18 and 80 years with T2D, on two or more oral hypoglycaemic agents and with an HbA1c ?7.5% in the last six months will be recruited from 74 general practices. The unit of randomization is the practice.

Primary outcome is change in glycated haemoglobin HbA1c (measured as a continuous variable). We hypothesize that the intervention arm will achieve an absolute HbA1c mean difference of 0.5% lower than control group at 12 months follow up. Secondary outcomes include the number of participants who successfully transfer to insulin and the proportion who achieve HbA1c measurement of <7.0%. We will also collect data on patient psychosocial outcomes and healthcare utilization and costs.

Discussion

The study is a pragmatic translational study with important potential implications for people with T2D, healthcare professionals and funders of healthcare though making better use of scarce healthcare resources, improving timely access to therapy that can improve disease outcomes.

Text
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More information

Published date: 14 February 2014
Keywords: type 2 diabetes, primary care, nursing, randomized trial, insulin, implementation, australia, health services research
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 366916
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/366916
PURE UUID: b37535a4-749b-47d2-bcaf-9ea05b9dcf45
ORCID for Carl May: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0451-2690

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 14 Jul 2014 15:53
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 17:19

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Contributors

Author: John S. Furler
Author: Doris Young
Author: James Best
Author: Elizabeth Patterson
Author: David O’Neal
Author: Danny Liew
Author: Jane Speight
Author: Leonie Segal
Author: Carl May ORCID iD
Author: Jo-Anne Manski-Nankervis
Author: Elizabeth Holmes-Truscott
Author: Louise Ginnivan
Author: Irene D. Blackberry

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