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Integrated health system intervention aimed at reducing type 2 diabetes risk in women after gestational diabetes in South Africa (IINDIAGO): a randomised controlled trial protocol

Integrated health system intervention aimed at reducing type 2 diabetes risk in women after gestational diabetes in South Africa (IINDIAGO): a randomised controlled trial protocol
Integrated health system intervention aimed at reducing type 2 diabetes risk in women after gestational diabetes in South Africa (IINDIAGO): a randomised controlled trial protocol
Introduction: South Africa has a high prevalence of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM; 15%) and many of these women (48%) progress to type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) within 5 years post partum. A significant proportion (47%) of the women are not aware of their diabetes status after the index pregnancy, which may be in part to low postnatal diabetes screening rates. Therefore, we aim to evaluate a intervention that reduces the subsequent risk of developing T2DM among women with recent GDM. Our objectives are fourfold: (1) compare the completion of the nationally recommended 6-week postpartum oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) between intervention and control groups; (2) compare the diabetes risk reduction between control and intervention groups at 12 months’ post partum; (3) assess the process of implementation; and (4) assess the cost-effectiveness of the proposed intervention package.

Methods and analyses: convergent parallel mixed-methods study with the main component being a pragmatic, 2-arm individually randomised controlled trial, which will be carried out at five major referral centres and up to 26 well-baby clinics in the Western Cape and Gauteng provinces of South Africa. Participants (n=370) with GDM (with no prior history of either type 1 or type 2 diabetes) will be recruited into the study at 24–36 weeks’ gestational age, at which stage first data collection will take place. Subsequent data collection will take place at 6–8 weeks after delivery and again at 12 months. The primary outcome for the trial is twofold: first, the completion of the recommended 2-hour OGTT at the well-baby clinics 6–8 weeks post partum, and second, a composite diabetes risk reduction indicator at 12 months. Process evaluation will assess fidelity, acceptability, and dose of the intervention.

Ethics and dissemination: ethics approval has been granted from University of Cape Town (829/2016), University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg (M170228), University of Stellenbosch (N17/04/032) and the University of Montreal (2019-794). The results of the trial will be disseminated through publication in peer-reviewed journals and presentations to key South African Government stakeholders and health service providers.
behavior, diabetes in pregnancy, health services administration & management, public health
2044-6055
Norris, Shane A.
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Zarowsky, Christina
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Murphy, Katherine
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Ware, Lisa Jayne
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Lombard, Carl
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Matjila, Mushi
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Chivese, Tawanda
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Muhwava, Lorrein Shamiso
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Mutabazi, Jean Claude
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Harbron, Janetta
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Fairall, Lara R.
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Lambert, Estelle
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Levitt, Naomi
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Norris, Shane A.
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Zarowsky, Christina
94ab8031-9394-410c-968e-c821ab9847af
Murphy, Katherine
08179ab7-35dc-4078-9319-850fa87d206e
Ware, Lisa Jayne
e8ea2106-69a2-4318-b326-831010d17006
Lombard, Carl
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Matjila, Mushi
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Chivese, Tawanda
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Muhwava, Lorrein Shamiso
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Mutabazi, Jean Claude
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Harbron, Janetta
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Fairall, Lara R.
ddfb89e8-8b5c-4612-84a4-0a870d3c3925
Lambert, Estelle
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Levitt, Naomi
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Norris, Shane A., Zarowsky, Christina, Murphy, Katherine, Ware, Lisa Jayne, Lombard, Carl, Matjila, Mushi, Chivese, Tawanda, Muhwava, Lorrein Shamiso, Mutabazi, Jean Claude, Harbron, Janetta, Fairall, Lara R., Lambert, Estelle and Levitt, Naomi (2024) Integrated health system intervention aimed at reducing type 2 diabetes risk in women after gestational diabetes in South Africa (IINDIAGO): a randomised controlled trial protocol. BMJ Open, 14 (1), [e073316]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2023-073316).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: South Africa has a high prevalence of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM; 15%) and many of these women (48%) progress to type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) within 5 years post partum. A significant proportion (47%) of the women are not aware of their diabetes status after the index pregnancy, which may be in part to low postnatal diabetes screening rates. Therefore, we aim to evaluate a intervention that reduces the subsequent risk of developing T2DM among women with recent GDM. Our objectives are fourfold: (1) compare the completion of the nationally recommended 6-week postpartum oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) between intervention and control groups; (2) compare the diabetes risk reduction between control and intervention groups at 12 months’ post partum; (3) assess the process of implementation; and (4) assess the cost-effectiveness of the proposed intervention package.

Methods and analyses: convergent parallel mixed-methods study with the main component being a pragmatic, 2-arm individually randomised controlled trial, which will be carried out at five major referral centres and up to 26 well-baby clinics in the Western Cape and Gauteng provinces of South Africa. Participants (n=370) with GDM (with no prior history of either type 1 or type 2 diabetes) will be recruited into the study at 24–36 weeks’ gestational age, at which stage first data collection will take place. Subsequent data collection will take place at 6–8 weeks after delivery and again at 12 months. The primary outcome for the trial is twofold: first, the completion of the recommended 2-hour OGTT at the well-baby clinics 6–8 weeks post partum, and second, a composite diabetes risk reduction indicator at 12 months. Process evaluation will assess fidelity, acceptability, and dose of the intervention.

Ethics and dissemination: ethics approval has been granted from University of Cape Town (829/2016), University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg (M170228), University of Stellenbosch (N17/04/032) and the University of Montreal (2019-794). The results of the trial will be disseminated through publication in peer-reviewed journals and presentations to key South African Government stakeholders and health service providers.

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Submitted date: 2 March 2023
Accepted/In Press date: 27 November 2023
Published date: 9 January 2024
Keywords: behavior, diabetes in pregnancy, health services administration & management, public health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 497116
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497116
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: a1640393-1aaa-484f-816a-67a48d63f52f
ORCID for Shane A. Norris: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7124-3788

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Date deposited: 14 Jan 2025 17:39
Last modified: 16 Jan 2025 03:02

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Contributors

Author: Shane A. Norris ORCID iD
Author: Christina Zarowsky
Author: Katherine Murphy
Author: Lisa Jayne Ware
Author: Carl Lombard
Author: Mushi Matjila
Author: Tawanda Chivese
Author: Lorrein Shamiso Muhwava
Author: Jean Claude Mutabazi
Author: Janetta Harbron
Author: Lara R. Fairall
Author: Estelle Lambert
Author: Naomi Levitt

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