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Empowerment, Motivation and Medical Adherence (EMMA).

Not Applicable
Withdrawn
Conditions
Type2 Diabetes Mellitus
Interventions
Behavioral: EMMA
Other: Treatment as Usual
Registration Number
NCT03008395
Lead Sponsor
Nova Scotia Health Authority
Brief Summary

Outcomes in type 2 diabetes are largely achieved by self-management efforts by individuals living with diabetes. Diabetes self-management is typically provided using the principles of adult education. Current evidence suggests that standard educational interventions are suboptimal. This study evaluates a novel approach to diabetes self-management using dialogue tools based on empowerment and motivational communication methods. The approach evaluated in this study is called EMMA: empowerment, motivation and medical adherence. Participants will be randomized to EMMA and treatment as usual, treated for a period of 4 months and evaluated over a period of 12 months.

Detailed Description

The management of type 2 diabetes (T2D) is experienced by many patients as being very complex. This is especially true when diabetes management includes multiple medical interventions such as oral agents and injectable medication (insulin, GLP-1; DPP-4s) in combination with diabetes specific behaviours such as blood glucose monitoring and foot care as well as healthy lifestyle behaviours such as physical activity and healthy eating. Studies show that 40-50 % of patients with T2D have suboptimal adherence to self-management recommendations. In general, it is estimated that about half of patients with chronic diseases do not take their medications as prescribed. Suboptimal medical adherence drives poor glycemic control as well as poor quality of life for an individual patient not to mention increased health care costs due to comorbidities, reduced work function and hospital admissions.

Suboptimal adherence may be driven by numerous factors, including lack of symptoms of TD2 (perceived nonseriousness of the disease), side-effects of treatments (GI distress associated with metformin, weight gain associated with insulin) in conjunction with a complex dosing regimen, lack of knowledge or belief in the efficiency of the medication, lack of motivation, cultural factors as well as poor instruction and judgmental communication between the healthcare professional and patient.

There is a need for new methods to understand the drivers of nonadherence and support the patient to proactively self-manage their TD2. There is also a need for new tools (i.e., knowledge translation methods) to support healthcare professionals to engage patients based on dialogue (collaboration) and active patient involvement (self-management), to overcome the barriers to adherence and thereby improve their ability to obtain good glycemic control. The purpose of this study is to evaluate a self-management support intervention called EMMA: Empowerment, motivation \& medical adherence.

EMMA is a concept consisting of a number of dialogue tools for use in diabetes consultations (see below). The concept was, in its original form tested, in a feasibility study (N = 19 T2D) in 2011-12. The study showed significant reduction in HbA1c (EMMA: median decrease of 2.0 mmol / mol (-1.0 to 3.0) versus control: median increase 2.5 mmol / mol (-2.0 to -4.5) p = 0.05) (Varming 2012; Andrésdóttir 2014). The investigators have been collaborating with the Danish group who have developed the EMMA protocol and have developed training programs to support the diabetes educator in the delivery of the intervention. The use of the EMMA method is very consistent with motivational communication and behaviour change counselling. The investigators plan to conduct a small scale randomized comparison trial of the EMMA method with diabetes services at the NSHA Central Zone.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
WITHDRAWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
Not specified
Inclusion Criteria
  • Adults with type 2 diabetes ≥ 18 years
  • Type 2 diabetes ≥ 1 years
  • HbA1c ≥ 8 % at the last three visits before randomization
  • On oral or injectable medications (insulin, GLP-1; DPP-4)
  • Can speak, read and understand English
Exclusion Criteria
  • Participation in other clinical intervention studies during the trial period
  • Receiving psychological or psychiatric treatment for a mental health disorder
  • Severely impaired vision or blindness

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
EMMAEMMAThese participants will receive diabetes self-management education using the dialogue tools, which emphasize empowerment and use the principles of motivational communication and behaviour modification. There will be a series of four visits using the dialogue tools to guide the patient toward meaningful self-management tasks. This is not the typical approach, where providers tell the patient the behaviours they, not the patient, consider priorities. This intervention will evaluate if medical outcomes (A1c) and adherence are improved using a patient-centered not a clinician-cantered approach in individuals with poor diabetes control.
Treatment as UsualTreatment as UsualThe participants will receive standard diabetes education via group and individual sessions with certified diabetes educators. In this method the patient is provided structured education in which there is an emphasis on covering clinician-determined aspects of diabetes knowledge and self-management. The emphasis vis on diabetes educator recommendations.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Hemoglobin A1c12 months

Hemoglobin A1c is a blood test that is considered to be the gold standard of diabetes control

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Diabetes Distress12 Months

The validated scale, the Diabetes Distress Scale (DDS) measures the experience of the burden of diabetes in everyday life

Self-management of diabetes12 Months

The validated self-report scale, Treatment Self-Regulation Questionnaire (TSRQ), measures the patient's motivation for health behaviour change

Self-Efficacy at diabetes self-management12 Months

The validated self-report scale, the Perceived Competence in Diabetes (PCD), measures the patient's experience of competence in diabetes self-management

WHO-QoL Scale12 months

The validated WHO quality of life self-report index will be used to assess quality of life

Support for autonomous control over diabetes12 months

The validated Healthcare Climate Questionnaire (HCCQ), measures the support for autonomy from healthcare professionals experienced by the patient

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