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    Supporting people with type 2 diabetes in effective use of their medicine through mobile health technology integrated with clinical care (SuMMiT-D pilot): results of a feasibility randomised trial

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    Author
    Farmer, Andrew J
    Allen, Julie
    Bartlett, Y Kiera
    Bower, Peter
    Chi, Yuan
    French, David P
    Gudgin, Bernard
    Holmes, Emily
    Horne, Robert
    Hughes, Dyfrig A
    Jones, Louise
    Kenning, Cassandra
    Locock, Louise
    McSharry, Jennifer
    Miles, Lisa
    Newhouse, Nicola
    Rea, Rustram
    Robinson, Stephanie
    Tarassenko, Lionel
    Velardo, Carmelo
    Williams, Nicola
    Yu, Ly-Mee
    Show allShow less
    Keyword
    Behavioural change intervention
    Digital health
    Feasibility study
    Medication adherence
    Primary care
    Process evaluation
    Randomised controlled trial
    Type 2 diabetes
    Date
    2024-01
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    DOI
    10.1186/s40814-023-01429-5
    Abstract
    Background: The purpose of this 6-month intervention pilot feasibility randomised trial was to test sending brief messages using mobile phones to promote self-management through taking medication as prescribed to people with type 2 diabetes. This was to inform the design and conduct of a future large-scale United Kingdom-based clinical trial and establish the feasibility of recruitment, the technology used, follow-up, and data collection. Methods: A multicentre individually randomised, controlled parallel group trial in primary care, recruiting adults (≥ 35 years) with type 2 diabetes in England. Consenting participants were randomly allocated to receive short message system text messages up to four times a week, or usual care, for a period of 6 months; messages contained behavioural change techniques targeting medication use. The primary outcome was the rate of recruitment to randomisation of participants to the trial with a planned rate of 22 participants randomised per month. The study also aimed to establish the feasibility of follow-up at 6 months, with an aim of retaining more than 80% of participants. Data, including patient-reported measures, were collected at baseline and the end of the 6-month follow-up period, and a notes review was completed at 24 months. Results: The trial took place between 26 November 2018 and 30 September 2019. In total 209 participants were randomly allocated to intervention (n = 103) or usual care (n = 106). The maximum rate of monthly recruitment to the trial was 60-80 participants per month. In total, 12,734 messages were sent to participants. Of these messages, 47 were identified as having failed to be sent by the service provider. Participants sent 2,864 messages to the automated messaging system. Baseline data from medical records were available for > 90% of participants with the exception of cholesterol (78.9%). At 6 months, a further HbA1c measurement was reported for 67% of participants. In total medical record data were available at 6 months for 207 (99.0%) of participants and completed self-report data were available for 177 (84.7%) of participants. Conclusion: The feasibility of a large-scale randomised evaluation of brief message intervention for people with type 2 diabetes appears to be high using this efficient design. Failure rate of sending messages is low, rapid recruitment was achieved among people with type 2 diabetes, clinical data is available on participants from routine medical records and self-report of economic measures was acceptable.
    Citation
    SuMMiT-D Collaborative Group; Farmer AJ, Allen J, Bartlett YK, Bower P, Chi Y, French DP, Gudgin B, Holmes E, Horne R, Hughes DA, Jones L, Kenning C, Locock L, McSharry J, Miles L, Newhouse N, Rea R, Robinson S, Tarassenko L, Velardo C, Williams N, Yu LM. Supporting people with type 2 diabetes in effective use of their medicine through mobile health technology integrated with clinical care (SuMMiT-D pilot): results of a feasibility randomised trial. Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2024 Jan 25;10(1):15
    Type
    Article
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/19212
    Note
    This article relates to a research study that included patients or members of the workforce as study participants from GP practices in Nottingham and Nottinghamshire.
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