The Role and Effectiveness of Diabetes Coaches in British Columbia
NCT ID: NCT02247271
Last Updated: 2018-05-07
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
100 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2014-09-01
2017-09-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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DIABETES COACH RECRUITMENT AND TRAINING. Recruitment and training will occur in the first 6 months. Criteria includes: living in the Fraser Health Region, adults, having type 2 diabetes or living with someone who has type 2 diabetes, and having similar cultural and ethnic background as members of the community. The coaches will most likely have already completed participation in a self-management program and therefore be knowledgeable in using self-management support strategies.
Competency-based training will be conducted to alleviate potential health professional concerns regarding the quality of service provided by non-professionals. Based on the experience using health workers to assist patients with diabetes (14), our project will provide a six-week training which will include:
* self-management support strategies as per the Five As approach (15);
* the Training Curriculum for Health Coaches (16);
* using behavioural change strategies on exercise, eating habits, smoking, and alcohol use developed by the national Service's Health Trainer Manual (17);
* basic information on diabetes and associated chronic diseases;
* finding and using governmental and community services;
* navigating the health care system; and if required
* completing the Diabetes Self-Management Program. Health coaches will undergo a final exam to receive certification from the University of Victoria. Subjects will be paired with a diabetes coach by the study coordinator. An innovative aspect of the proposed research is that baseline outcome measures will be calculated and used to tailor the coach intervention. For example one of the measures, the Patient Activation Measure (18), assesses an individual's knowledge, skill and confidence in managing their health, and specifies the types of interventions to increase activation. This is important because a systematic review of evidence on the performance of the Patient Activation Measure conducted by the National Health Service in 2012 (19) found that: higher PAM scores were associated with increased patient participation, significantly better health and significantly lower rates of doctor office visits, emergency room visits, and hospital nights; healthy behaviours; improved adherence to treatment; and with better doctor-patient communication. The study is also using other outcome measures that enable the tailoring of the intervention, for example the medication adherence and health literacy measures.
The coach will work with the subject by telephone for six months. Coaches will help subjects gain the knowledge, skills, tools, and confidence they need to become active participants in their care so that they can reach their self-identified health goals. The coach will also assist the patient to participate in the Diabetes Self-Management Program, learn and use effective self-management strategies (i.e., action plans and problem solving); understand and follow their medication regimen; access community resources (e.g., recreation centre); and receive eligible federal and provincial mandated services (e.g., income assistance, disability benefits), and learn about and use community resources (e.g., recreation centres), and assist the patient to use mandated services (e.g., income assistance).
With respect to innovation, it is time to tap the (largely) untapped resource of peer support to deal with the burden of diabetes (20). According to the World Health Organization, patients and families are the most undervalued assets in the health care system (10). A potential solution is to train peers to " coach" or work collaboratively to deliver self-management support to persons with diabetes. Peer coaching is defined as " helping patients gain the knowledge, skills, tools, and confidence they need to become active participants in their care so that they can reach their self-identified health goals" (21). A peer coaching intervention complements, enhances, and increases the comprehensiveness of primary care services, while increasing patient centredness and reducing fragmentation of care (21). While family, caretakers, friends and healthcare professionals can fill the role of advisor, supporter and role model, they can rarely fulfill all three roles. Peer health coaches, however, can fulfill all three roles and also benefit personally. Utilizing peer advisors for chronic disease management and particularly for people with type 2 diabetes has the potential to be cost effective (22). In a systematic review of the literature on peer support for chronic and complex conditions, the authors found more evidence that peer self-management support was effective with socially disadvantaged groups. Improved health outcomes were found for a Bangladeshi and Maori community with culturally relevant peer support in diabetes programs (23).
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
NONE
Study Groups
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Diabetes health coach support
The intervention is that subjects will receive coach support once a week for 30 minutes for six months. Support is provided by a Diabetes Coach who uses self-management support strategies to assist subjects to achieve their personal health goals.
Diabetes health coach support
Receives support from a trained peer health coach for a six month period
Interventions
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Diabetes health coach support
Receives support from a trained peer health coach for a six month period
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
19 Years
80 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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The Lawson Foundation
OTHER
University of Victoria
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Patrick T. McGowan, PhD
Professor, School of Public Health and Social Policy
Principal Investigators
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Patrick T McGowan, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Victoria
Locations
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UVictoria
Delta, British Columbia, Canada
Countries
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Related Links
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Study proposal citations
Other Identifiers
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2014-775-Diabetes
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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