| Literature DB >> 32459654 |
Kaifeng Liu1, Zhenzhen Xie1, Calvin Kalun Or1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mobile app-assisted self-care interventions are emerging promising tools to support self-care of patients with chronic diseases such as type 2 diabetes and hypertension. The effectiveness of such interventions requires further exploration for more supporting evidence.Entities:
Keywords: hypertension; mobile app; self-care; type 2 diabetes
Year: 2020 PMID: 32459654 PMCID: PMC7435643 DOI: 10.2196/15779
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Figure 1Flow diagram of the study selection process.
Summary of the characteristics of the 27 trials.
| Characteristics | Value | |
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| 2007-2009 | 2 (7) |
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| 2010-2012 | 4 (15) |
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| 2013-2015 | 10 (37) |
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| 2016-2019 | 11 (41) |
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| North America | 13 (48) |
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| Europe | 7 (26) |
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| Asia | 5 (19) |
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| Africa | 2 (7) |
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| Type 2 diabetes | 19 (70) |
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| Hypertension | 6 (22) |
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| Type 2 diabetes and/or hypertension | 1 (4) |
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| Coexisting type 2 diabetes and hypertension | 1 (4) |
| Sample size, median (range) | 75 (14-250) | |
| Mean age of participants in years, mean (range) | 57.3 (48.4-69.5) | |
| Proportion of male participants in %, median (range) | 54 (28-76) | |
| Trial length in months, median (range) | 6 (2-12) | |
Details of the 27 trials.
| Trial, publication year, study location | Trial length | Sample | HbA1c a/BPb eligibility | Intervention | Comparison treatment | |
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| Anzaldo-Campos et al, 2016, Mexico | 10 months | IGc: n=102; CGd: n=100; mean age 52.0 years; male 38%; diabetes duration 8.3 years | HbA1c≥ 8% | A mobile app to facilitate self-monitoring of health-related data (eg, BGe and diet) and support from clinicians, nurses, and peer educators for care management | Usual care and the provision of educational classes and health evaluation in monthly medical group visits |
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| Bender et al, 2017, US | 6 months | IG: n=22; CG: n=23; mean age 57.6 years; male 38%; diabetes duration not reported | No limit for HbA1c | A mobile app for behavior tracking, a Fitbit for steps monitoring, and social media for social support and education | Usual care and a Fitbit only for daily wear |
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| Greenwood et al, 2015, US | 6 months | IG: n=45; CG: n=45; mean age 55.7 years; male 53%; diabetes duration 8.2 years | HbA1c: 7.5%-10.9% | A tablet-based app and a portal to support patients’ BG monitoring and diabetes education and enable certified diabetes educators’ access to patient data for telemonitoring | Usual care, booklets and referrals for diabetes education, and evaluation of patient self-reported glucose data by certified diabetes educators |
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| Hansen et al, 2017, Denmark | 8 months | IG: n=83; CG: n=82; mean age 58 years; male 64%; diabetes duration 12.3 years | HbA1c> 7.5% | A tablet-based app to enable reporting of health-related data (eg, BG and BP) and monthly communication with HCPsf via video-conferencing | Usual care |
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| Holmen et al (1), 2014, Norway | 12 months | IG: n=51; CG: n=25; mean age 57.7 years; male 64%; diabetes duration 10.6 years | HbA1c≥ 7.1% | A mobile phone-based system to enable vital sign monitoring, goal management, and motivational feedback | Usual care |
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| Holmen et al (2), 2014, Norway | 12 months | IG: n=50; CG: n=25; mean age 56.9 years; male 53%; diabetes duration 9.5 years | HbA1c≥ 7.1% | A mobile phone-based system (to enable vital sign monitoring, goal management, and motivational feedback) and health counseling delivered by diabetes specialist nurses | Usual care |
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| Hsu et al, 2016, US | 12 weeks | IG: n=20; CG: n=20; mean age 53.6 years; male sex not reported; diabetes duration 9.3 years | HbA1c: 9%-14% | A cloud-based diabetes management app supporting BG self-monitoring, insulin initiation/titration, shared decision making, and communication | Usual care with interim face-to-face visits and telephone/fax communication with educators, physicians, and/or nurses |
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| Karhula et al, 2015, Finland | 12 months | IG: n=180; CG: n=70; mean age 66.3 years; male 56%; diabetes duration not reported | HbA1c> 6.5% | A mobile app for self-monitoring of health parameters (eg, BG and BP) and remote health coaching | Usual care |
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| Kleinman et al, 2017, India | 6 months | IG: n=44; CG: n=46; mean age 48.4 years; male 70%; diabetes duration 9.2 years | HbA1c: 7.5%-12.5% | A smartphone app for patients and a web portal plus an app for HCPs for receiving reminders, data visualization, and providing care support to enhance self-care and collaborative care decisions | Usual care |
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| Nagrebetsky et al, 2013, UK | 6 months | IG: n=7; CG: n=7; mean age 58 years; male 71%; diabetes duration 2.6 years | HbA1c: 8%-11% | A mobile phone-based telehealth platform (for self-monitoring of BG and self-titration of oral glucose-lowering medication) and monthly telephone calls (for lifestyle monitoring and change) | Usual care and monthly telephone calls for lifestyle monitoring and change |
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| Orsama et al, 2013, Finland | 10 months | IG: n=24; CG: n=24; mean age 61.9 years; male 54%; diabetes duration not reported | HbA1c: 6.5%-11%; SBPg >140 mm Hg or DBPh >90 mm Hg | A diabetes lifestyle and self-care promotion program based on a mobile app to allow patients to report their conditions and receive system-generated feedback on health behaviors | Usual care, diabetes education, and HCP counseling |
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| Quinn et al, 2008, US | 3 months | IG: n=13; CG: n=13; mean age 51.0 years; male 35%; diabetes duration 9.3 years | HbA1c ≥ 7.5% | A mobile phone-based software to provide real-time feedback on patient BG levels, display medication instructions, incorporate hypo- and hyperglycemia treatment algorithms, and request data for diabetes management | Usual care and instructions to patients about reporting BG levels to HCPs via phone calls or fax once every 2 weeks |
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| Quinn et al, 2011, US (1) | 12 months | IG: n=23; CG: n=19; mean age 53 years; male 52%; diabetes duration 8.3 years | HbA1c ≥ 7.5% | A mobile app and patient care provider web portal to support patient self-monitoring and enable HCPs to receive health data shared by patients | Usual care |
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| Quinn et al, 2011, US (2) | 12 months | IG: n=22; CG: n=19; mean age 53.5 years; male 46%; diabetes duration 7.8 years | HbA1c ≥ 7.5% | A mobile app and patient care provider web portal to support patient self-monitoring and allow HCPs to access unanalyzed patient data | Usual care |
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| Quinn et al, 2011, US (3) | 12 months | IG: n=62; CG: n=18; mean age 52.3 years; male 50%; diabetes duration 8.5 years | HbA1c ≥ 7.5% | A mobile app and patient care provider web portal to support patient self-monitoring and allow HCPs to access analyzed patient data and evidence-based care guidelines | Usual care |
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| Sun et al, 2019, China | 6 months | IG: n=44; CG: n=47; mean age 68.0 years; male 41%; diabetes duration 11.4 years | HbA1c: 7.0%-10.0% | A mobile app for self-monitoring of BG, diet, and physical activity; sharing of measurement records; and receiving HCP-provided care recommendations | Usual care |
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| Takenga et al, 2014, Congo | 2 months | IG: n=20; CG: n=20; mean age 53.3 years; male 73%; diabetes duration not reported | No limit for HbA1c | A mobile system to support patients’ tracking of health conditions (eg, BG, BP, and body weight) and communication with HCPs | Usual care |
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| Waki et al, 2014, Japan | 3 months | IG: n=27; CG: n=27; mean age 57.3 years; male 76%; diabetes duration 9.1 years | No limit for HbA1c | A smartphone-based system for self-monitoring of health conditions (eg, BG, BP, and diet), communication with HCPs, and receiving system’s auto-generated feedback | Usual care |
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| Wayne et al, 2015, Canada | 6 months | IG: n=67; CG: n=64; mean age 53.2 years; male 28%; diabetes duration not reported | HbA1c ≥ 7.3% | A mobile phone-supported health coach program allowing patients to track their conditions (eg, BG, diet, physical activity, and mood) and communicate with HCPs | Usual care, exercise education, and health coach support in goal setting and progress monitoring through in-person meetings/telephones |
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| Kim et al, 2016, US | 6 months | IG: n=52; CG: n=43; mean age 57.6 years; male 32%; hypertension duration not reported | No limit for BP | A mobile app (equipped with a BP monitoring device, electronic reminders, and a web-based disease management program for patient self-monitoring) and a reach-out program (delivered by nursing staff for education about medication, disease prevent, and chronic disease management) | Usual care and a reach-out program of the same type used in the IG |
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| Lakshminarayan et al, 2018, US | 90 days | IG: n=34; CG: n=22; mean age 65.0 years; male 68%; hypertension duration not reported | No limit for BP | A smartphone app supporting BP self-monitoring, nurse-delivered education, and HCP-provided feedback | Usual care and education on hypertension management |
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| Logan et al, 2012, Canada | 12 months | IG: n=55; CG: n=55; mean age 62.9 years; male 56%; hypertension duration not reported | SBP ≥130 mm Hg | A smartphone app (for BP telemonitoring and self-care) and a booklet (with information about self-management, treatments, and therapy goals) | Usual care and a booklet of the same type used in the IG |
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| Márquez Contreras et al, 2019, Spain | 12 months | IG: n=73; CG: n=75; mean age 57.5 years; male sex 48%; hypertension duration not reported | No limit for BP | A smartphone app to promote education about hypertension and provide patients with reminders of appointments and medication | Usual care |
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| Moore et al, 2014, US | 12 weeks | IG: n=20; CG: n=22; mean age 50.0 years; male 60%; hypertension duration not reported | BP: 140/90-180/120 mm Hg | A tablet-based app, virtual visits, instant messaging, and a nurse health coach to facilitate self-monitoring of BP and medication intake; visualization of information on actions, outcomes, and medication adjustment; and discussion about care management and goal settings | Usual care together with office visits, phone calls, and emails with HCPs for discussing care management, goal settings, and medication adjustment |
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| Sarfo et al, 2019, Ghana | 9 months | IG: n=30; CG: n=30; mean age 55 years; male 65%; hypertension duration not reported | SBP ≥140 mm Hg | A smartphone app for monitoring and reporting of BP and medication intake, provision of motivational text messages generated based on patients’ medication adherence, and sharing of patients’ health reports with clinicians | Usual care and text messages about healthy lifestyle management and clinicians’ monthly review of patients’ BP |
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| Or and Tao, 2016, Hong Kong SAR, China | 3 months | IG: n=33; CG: n=30; mean age 69.5 years; male 32%; diabetes duration 12.5 years; hypertension duration 10.2 years | No limit for HbA1c and BP | A tablet-based self-monitoring app allowing automated recording and monitoring of BG and B | Usual care |
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| Yoo et al, 2009, Korea | 3 months | IG: n=57; CG: n=54; mean age 58.2 years; male 59%; diabetes duration 6.6 years; hypertension duration 3.7 years | HbA1c: 6.5%-10%; BP >130/80 mm Hg | An internet-enabled, cellphone-based system coupled with a BG measuring device, an automatic BP monitor, a body weight scale, and a database providing reminders, health recommendations, and data sharing for self-care | Usual care |
aHbA1c: hemoglobin A1c.
bBP: blood pressure.
cIG: intervention group.
dCG: control group.
eBG: blood glucose.
fHCP: health care provider.
gSBP: systolic blood pressure.
hDBP: diastolic blood pressure.
Figure 2Risk of bias of the 27 trials.
Figure 3Risk of bias for each trial.
Results of meta-analysis and Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation assessments for hemoglobin A1c levels, systolic blood pressure, and diastolic blood pressure.
| Outcomes | Trials included | Sample size | SMDa (95% CI) |
| Egger test | Quality of evidence (GRADE)b | ||
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| HbA1cc levels | 21 | 1671 | −0.44 (−0.59 to −0.29) | <.001 | 50 | 1.15 | .26 | |
| SBPf | 16 | 1433 | −0.17 (−0.31 to −0.03) | .02 | 41 | 0.52 | .61 | |
| DBPg | 14 | 1292 | −0.17 (−0.30 to −0.03) | .02 | 25 | 0.09 | .93 | |
aSMD: standardized mean difference.
bGRADE: Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation.
cHbA1c: hemoglobin A1c.
dDowngraded by one level for indirectness (surrogate outcome).
eDowngraded by one level for inconsistency (moderate heterogeneity level, I2 = 50%).
fSBP: systolic blood pressure.
gDBP: diastolic blood pressure.
Figure 4Forest plots for hemoglobin A1c (top), systolic blood pressure (middle), and diastolic blood pressure (bottom).
Results of subgroup analysis by intervention feature in relation to reductions in hemoglobin A1c levels, systolic blood pressure, and diastolic blood pressure.
| Features | HbA1ca reduction | SBPb reduction | DBPc reduction | |
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| BGd | — e | Δf | •g |
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| BPh | Δ | • | Δ |
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| Body weight | Δ | Δ | ×i |
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| Medication | • | Δ | Δ |
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| Diet | Δ | × | × |
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| Physical activity | Δ | × | Δ |
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| Mood | — | — | — |
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| Automated feedback | Δ | • | • |
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| Medication adjustment aid | Δ | — | — |
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| Personalized goal setting | × | • | • |
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| Reminders | Δ | • | Δ |
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| • | — | — | |
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| Δ | • | Δ | |
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| Δ | • | × | |
aHbA1c: hemoglobin A1c.
bSBP: systolic blood pressure.
cDBP: diastolic blood pressure.
dBG: blood glucose.
e—: Subgroup analysis was not performed for the feature because there were fewer than two trials in one of the subgroups.
fΔ: Similar changes were found between the two subgroups (presence of the feature vs absence of the feature).
g•: Presence of the feature was related to a more favorable effect on the outcome.
hBP: blood pressure.
i×: Absence of the feature was related to a more favorable effect on the outcome.
jHCP: health care provider.
Results of meta-analysis and Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation assessments for objective secondary outcomes.
| Outcomes | Trials included | Sample size | SMDa (95% CI) |
| Egger test | Quality of evidence (GRADEb) | ||
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| FBGc | 6 | 416 | −0.29 (−0.49 to −0.10) | .004 | 2 | 2.27 | .09 | |
| Waist circumference | 4 | 433 | −0.23 (−0.43 to −0.04) | .02 | 0 | 0.60 | .61 | |
| Body weight | 9 | 682 | −0.09 (−0.24 to 0.07) | .97 | 0 | 0.02 | .98 | |
| BMI | 6 | 575 | −0.06 (−0.23 to 0.12) | .53 | 12 | 3.36 | .03 | |
| Total cholesterol | 7 | 777 | −0.18 (−0.37 to 0.02) | .07 | 35 | 0.23 | .83 | |
| LDLf cholesterol | 7 | 734 | −0.08 (−0.23 to 0.07) | .29 | 0 | 0.06 | .95 | |
| HDLg cholesterol | 7 | 743 | −0.10 (−0.28 to 0.07) | .24 | 18 | 1.26 | .26 | |
| Triglycerides | 7 | 720 | −0.13 (−0.29 to 0.02) | .09 | 0 | 0.21 | .84 | |
aSMD: standardized mean difference.
bGRADE: Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation.
cFBG: fasting blood glucose.
dDowngraded by one level for indirectness (surrogate outcome).
eDowngraded by one level for publication bias.
fLDL: low-density lipoprotein.
gHDL: high-density lipoprotein.
Narrative synthesis results of the effects of mobile app-assisted self-care interventions.
| Outcomes | Number of trials | ||||
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| Favoring interventiona | Showing no significant difference between intervention and controlb | Favoring controlc | ||
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| Postprandial BGd | 1 [ |
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| Right brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity |
| 1 [ |
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| Left brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity |
| 1 [ |
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| Adiponectin | 1 [ |
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| High-sensitivity C-reactive protein |
| 1 [ |
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| Interleukin-6 |
| 1 [ |
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| Homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance |
| 1 [ |
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| Waist/hip ratio |
| 1 [ |
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| Creatinine |
| 1 [ |
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| Medication dose |
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| 1 [ |
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| Insulin dose |
| 1 [ |
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| Quality of life |
| 6 [ |
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| Diabetes symptoms |
| 3 [ |
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| Lifestyle-/health-related activity |
| 4 [ |
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| Adherence to medication | 1 [ | 5 [ |
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| Adherence to physical activities | 1 [ | 6 [ |
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| Adherence to healthy diet | 1 [ | 4 [ |
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| Frequency of carbohydrate spacing | 1 [ |
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| Frequency of smoking |
| 1 [ |
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| Frequency of drinking |
| 1 [ |
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| Frequency of communicating with physicians |
| 1 [ |
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| Adherence to BG monitoring | 2 [ |
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| Adherence to foot care | 1 [ |
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| Diabetes knowledge | 1 [ | 3 [ |
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| Hypertension knowledge |
| 3 [ |
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| Satisfaction with diabetes treatment | 1 [ | 1 [ |
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| Satisfaction with life |
| 1 [ |
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| Ability to interact with health organizations and HCPse |
| 2 [ |
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| Ability to monitor the conditions and having insights into living with the conditions |
| 2 [ |
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| Self-efficacy for medication taking/coping with diseases |
| 4 [ |
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| Emotional well-being |
| 2 [ |
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| Positive emotion |
| 1 [ |
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| Negative emotion |
| 1 [ |
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| Distress |
| 4 [ |
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| Depression |
| 7 [ | 1 [ |
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| Anxiety |
| 2 [ |
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| Comfort with self-monitoring |
| 1 [ |
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| Self-autonomous regulation |
| 1 [ |
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| Determination about not allowing illnesses to control life |
| 2 [ |
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| Positive and active engagement in life |
| 2 [ |
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| Feeling of having the skills to manage disease | 1 [ | 1 [ |
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| Feeling of having social support |
| 2 [ |
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aSignificant improvement in the outcome at the end of the trial in the intervention group compared with the control group.
bNo significant difference in the outcome at the end of the trial between the intervention and control groups.
cSignificant deterioration in the outcome at the end of the trial in the intervention group compared with the control group.
dBG: blood glucose.
eHCP: health care provider.