| Literature DB >> 30348142 |
Anne Meike Boels1, Guy Rutten2, Nicolaas Zuithoff2, Ardine de Wit2,3, Rimke Vos2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Health care providers aim to stimulate self-management in type 2 diabetes (T2DM) patients. However, they have a limited number of patient contacts to do this. With the growing number of T2DM patients, innovative and cost-effective interventions to promote self-management are needed. We aim to evaluate the effectiveness of diabetes self-management education via a smartphone app in T2DM patients on insulin therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioural change; Cost-effectiveness; Diabetes education; Hypoglycaemia; Insulin therapy; Self-management; Triggers; Type 2 diabetes mellitus; eHealth; mHealth
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30348142 PMCID: PMC6196442 DOI: 10.1186/s12902-018-0304-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Endocr Disord ISSN: 1472-6823 Impact factor: 2.763
Fig. 1Participant flowchart with the expected number of patients
Fig. 2TRIGGER app home screen. Translation: contact onderzoekers = contact information; informatie studie = study information; instellingen = settings; voeding = nutrition; beweging = physical activity; hypo’s voorkomen = preventing hypoglycaemia; glucose regulatie = glucose regulation
Examples or app messages
| Category | Message |
|---|---|
| Dietary habits | - Fruit juices are not as healthy as many people think: they contain lots of sugar and calories. Try to consume fruit juices as infrequently as possible, eat fruit instead! |
| Physical activity | - Take the stairs instead of the elevator, wherever you are. Or take the elevator to one floor below and take the last stairs. All steps count! |
| Prevention of Hypoglycaemia | - Instruct your spouse, family, neighbour, colleague or a friend on how they should act when you have a hypoglycaemic event. |
| Glucose variability | - Never inject insulin into the tough skin of insulin-induced lumps; because of slower absorption there, this may lead to blood glucose fluctuations. |
Description of questionnaires
| Questionnaire | Description | Score range | Completed at |
|---|---|---|---|
| Summary of Diabetes Self-Care Activities Measure (SDSCA) [ | 11 Items assessing several aspects of the diabetes regimen: diet, exercise, blood glucose testing, foot care and smoking. Items measure how many days a patient has performed self-care activities in the last 7 days. | 10 Items rated on an 8-point Likert scale, measuring how many days an activity is performed in the last week. One item measures smoking status (yes/no) and the amount of cigarettes smoked in the last week. Each of the domains is measured separately. | T0, T6 |
| Food habits questionnaire (FFQ) [ | 18 Items assessing patient’s habits with regard to preparation of food, fatty food intake, dietary products and fruit and vegetable intake. | All items differ in the scoring ranges, varying from four scoring options (never, sometimes, frequently or always) to eight options (never to 7 days a week) | T0, T6 |
| International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ) [ | 25 Items assessing how many days physical activities are performed during the past 7 days in four domains (work, transportation, housework and leisure-time), 2 items assess sedentary behaviour. | Total physical activity score is calculated as the sum of the number of minutes of total moderate activity for each subdomain, plus two times the number of minutes of total vigorous activity for each subdomain. | T0, T6 |
| EQ-5D-5 L [ | Quality of life questionnaire. | For the EQ-5D-Profile each domain has five levels of functioning: from no problems to severe problems. | T0, T3, T6, T9a |
| The Short Form (36) Health Survey (SF-36) [ | Generates a profile of scores on eight dimensions of health status: Physical Functioning (10 items), Role Physical (4 items), Bodily Pain (2 items), General Health (6 items), Vitality (4 items), Social Functioning (2 items), Role-Emotional (3 items) and Mental Health (5 items). | The different scales can be summarized in two component scores: the Physical Component Score and the Mental Component Score. Both scores range from 0 (least favorable health state) to 100 (most favorable health state). | T0, T6 |
| The Audit of Diabetes-Dependent Quality of Life (ADDQoL) [ | A measure of impact and importance of diabetes and its treatment on quality of life. The ADDQoL consists of 19 diabetes-specific items and two overview items. For each item the patient is asked how things would be without diabetes, with an impact rating and an importance rating. | The impact rating ranges from − 3 (very much better) to 1 (worse), the importance rating ranges from 3 (very important) to 0 (not at all important). The average weighted impact ADDQoL score is the sum of all the weighted impact scores in the nominator and of the number of domains in the denominator, and ranges from − 9 to 3. | T0, T6 |
| Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire (DTSQ) [ | Includes 8 items. In question 1 and 4–8 the satisfaction with the treatment is better if the scores are higher. In questions 2 and 3, lower scores indicate blood glucose levels closer to the ideal, and higher scores indicate problems. | Scores range per item from 6 (very satisfied) to 0 (very dissatisfied); total score range 36 to 0. | T0, T6 |
| Satisfaction and usability of the app | Questionnaire newly developed by the researchers contains questions about the satisfaction with regard to receiving app-triggers, frequency, timing and comprehensibility, see Additional file | All items will be rated on a 5-point Likert scale. | T6a |
| Outpatient clinic visits and paramedical health care use | Newly developed questionnaire contains one question on outpatient clinic visits (for patients recruited from primary care) or GP visits (for patients recruited from hospitals) and three questions on paramedical health care use: whether patients have visited a dietician, a physiotherapist or a specialised feet therapist the past 3 months. | All four questions are answered with yes or no. In case of a ‘yes’, patients have to fill in how many times they have visited the physician/therapist. | T3, T6 |
Abbreviations: T0 baseline measurement, T3 measurement after 3 months of follow-up, T6 measurement after 6 months of follow-up, T9 measurement after 9 months of follow-up
aCompleted by intervention group only
Fig. 3A schematic diagram with an overview of the study design and the main procedures