| Literature DB >> 35279813 |
Cécile Baradez1, Jan Liska1, Claire Brulle-Wohlhueter1, Divya Pushkarna2, Mike Baxter3, John Piette4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: With the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, health systems increasingly look to digital health solutions to provide support for self-management to people with type 2 diabetes (T2D). This review aimed to assess brief digital behavior change solutions (i.e., solutions that require limited engagement or contact) for T2D, including use of behavior change techniques (BCTs) and their impact on self-care and glycemic control.Entities:
Keywords: Behavior change; Brief interventions; Digital health; Type 2 diabetes
Year: 2022 PMID: 35279813 PMCID: PMC8917814 DOI: 10.1007/s13300-022-01244-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Ther ISSN: 1869-6961 Impact factor: 2.945
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram
Duration and frequency of interventions
| First author | Mode of administration | Intervention duration and frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Gordon [ | Video on a DVD | One-off view of 12-min video prior to virtual consultation |
| Kerfoot [ | e-mail or mobile app | 2 “game” questions, twice a week for 6 months to be answered individually and with the option of answering as part of an assigned team |
| Whittemore [ | In-person group sessions and SMS system | After 7 weekly in-person group sessions, 6 months of daily text messages |
| Gunawardena [ | Mobile app | Daily or weekly reminders described as user-defined for 6 months |
| Kusnanto [ | Mobile app | Daily notification messages (6/day) for 3 months |
| Lee [ | Mobile app | Feedback in the form of short supportive messages via app from health care professions 1–2/week for 6 months |
| Hilmarsdottir [ | Smartphone app | Brief weekly messages for 4 months (number not reported) along with individualized encouragement messages through the app from the first author Further 2 months of both types of messages every other week |
| Capozza [ | SMS system | 1–7 messages daily for 6 months described as user-defined contact because the message “STOP” could be used any time to reduce number of messages |
| Xu [ | SMS/ phone system with automated contact and bidirectional communication | Average 3 messages weekly with option for bidirectional communication with healthcare provider for 6 months, occurrence was tailored to individual in the event of an abnormal reading or trend being logged |
| Poppe [ | website and app | Daily and weekly messages in the form of messages or education sessions were made available for 5 weeks |
Summary of intervention, patient, and outcome characteristics
| Author year | Participants | Intervention and control | Outcome measures | Significant findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Gordon 2020 [ USA | 87 T2D rural living veterans, HbA1c 8.5% | 12-min video and pamphlet designed to improve provider-patient communication during video consultation Fully digital solution One off session | Ratings for post-visit provider-patient therapeutic alliance | Patients who watched a pre-visit educational video before their telehealth video consultation reported higher therapeutic alliance scores post-visit than the control group |
| Gunawardena 2019 [ | 67 T2D patients Mean age 52 years, 40% female, HbA1c 9.4% | Mobile app designed to support glucose management Fully digital solution 6 months | App usage HbA1c | Significantly lower A1c levels compared to the control group were observed over 6 months A1c improvement was positively correlated with app usage with over 80% using the app 8–9 times/week and 52% 12 times or more/week and 78% at 6 months |
Kerfoot 2017 [ USA | 456 T2D veterans, Mean age 60 years, 6.% female, HbA1c 9.0% | Online diabetes self-management game with integrated teams competition Integrated solution 6 months | HbA1c | The intervention group had significantly greater reductions in mean HbA1c over 6 months compared to the control |
Kusnanto 2019 [ Indonesia | 65 T2D patient 57% female, HbA1c 8.5% | Diabetes calendar app for SM education program Fully digital solution 3 months | Diabetes management self-efficacy scale (DMSES) HbA1c Cholesterol, triglyceride, LDL-c, insulin level | The intervention group had a significantly higher self-efficacy scores than the control group The intervention group had a significantly lower mean HbA1c levels than the control group The intervention group had a significantly better cholesterol, triglyceride, LDL-c, and insulin levels than the control group |
Poppe 2019 [ Belgium | 54 T2D patients Mean age 63 years, 27% female | Website and app designed to increase physical activity and reduce sedentary behavior Fully digital solution 5 weeks | Accelerometer assessed breaks from sedentary time | The intervention group displayed a significant increase in accelerometer-assessed breaks from sedentary time in comparison with the control group |
Capozza 2015 [ USA | 93 T2D patients Mean age 53 years 61% female | Two-way SMS system designed to improve glycemic control through coaching, education and testing reminders Fully digital solution 180 days | CSQ-8 (8-question Client Satisfaction Questionniare) Satisfaction survey Frequency of engagement HbA1c | Mean satisfaction score was 27.7/32 at 180 days 85% said “yes” to having improved disease knowledge and management strategies 94% said "yes” they would recommend intervention others 29% demonstrated frequent engagement (texting responses at least 3 × per week for ≥ 90 days) Both groups had decreased HbA1c but there was no significant difference between them |
Hilmarsdottir 2020 [ Iceland | 37 T2D patients Mean age 51yrs, 63% female, HbA1c 7.8% | Gamified app designed to support healthy lifestyle behaviors with the option to compete with other users Integrated solution 6 months | Problem Areas in Diabetes Scale (PAID) Satisfaction survey Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) HbA1c | There was a significant decrease in the intervention group (but not between groups) in diabetes distress anxiety symptoms and HbA1c levels |
Lee 2020 [ South Korea | 72 T2D patients Mean age 50 years, 68% female, HbA1c 7.4% | Diabetes self-management education app with individualized feedback from health care professionals via the app Integrated solution 6 months | Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire (DTSQc) HbA1c | The intervention group had a significantly higher rates of treatment satisfaction than the control group |
Whittemore 2019 [ Mexico | 47 T2D patients Mean age 56 years, 68% female | Diabetes self-management group sessions (in-person) followed by a texting system to support behavior change Integrated solution 7.6 months | Diabetes self-efficacy Blood glucose monitoring HbA1c | In the intervention group, HbA1c score, diet, and exercise was significantly improved (but not in comparison to the control) |
Xu 2020 [ USA | 65 low-income, mostly African American T2D patients Mean age 55 years, 68% female, HbA1c 9.5% | SMS/phone system designed to improve reduce HbA1c and fasting blood glucose (FBG) self-management through automated contact and some bidirectional communication Integrated solution 6 months | Engagement as measured by proportion responding to ≥ 25% of texts or calls over 4 weeks Fasting blood glucose HbA1c | Engagement was 58% for the intervention group and 48% for the control group The intervention groups had significantly decreased HbA1c and self-reported fasting blood glucose while the control group did not |
| Brief digital solutions have the benefit of being highly accessible and convenient as well as easily scalable for population-level care programs. This review assessed the impact of brief digital behavior change solutions for people living with type 2 diabetes (T2D) while also identifying some of the behavior change techniques (i.e., the “active ingredients”) that make these interventions successful | |
| Randomized trials indicate that brief digital solutions can improve T2D patient engagement, glycemic control, self-efficacy, and levels of physical activity | |
| Brief interventions have been evaluated in a variety of populations including patients with low incomes, with limited educational attainments, or living in rural areas. Results suggest that they can address some of the most complex patient needs and social determinants of health while being initiated more easily | |
| Simple, personalized, and short-duration digital solutions can improve diabetic outcomes and represent an important alternative to in-person interventions requiring greater investment of health system resources | |
| Brief, easy-to-use digital solutions can reduce patient burden, increase access to care, improve clinical and behavioral outcomes, and provide patients with control over how and when they engage self-management resources |