Affiliation:
1. College of Science, Engineering and Technology, Grand Canyon University, Arizona, United States
Abstract
Objectives:
Telephonic health coaching has been studied extensively as an interventional approach
for chronic disease management. No studies have been conducted evaluating the outcomes of a
multiyear study on health coaching participation and glycated haemoglobin (A1C) changes. Chronic
disease has been widespread in physical laborers, with a high onset of type 2 diabetes. The purpose of
this study was to establish the efficacy of telephonic health coaching as a means to manage type 2 diabetes
in adults with physical labor occupations.
Methods:
The eligibility criteria were: 1) Adults aged 20-80 during the study entirety; 2) A diagnosis of
type 2 diabetes; and 3) Yearly A1C and Body Mass Index (BMI) testing via verified biometric screenings.
Participants completing health coaching for at least 2 years during the study period were assigned
to the experimental group and participants who only had yearly biometric screening were assigned to
the control group.
Results:
From 2014-2018, 350 participants met the inclusion criteria. The mean age at baseline was 56
years (SD 8.26), with a mean baseline A1C of 7.14% for the test group, and 5.41% for the control
group. Pre-post test changes saw an increase in A1C of 0.85% in the test group, and 0.95% in the control
group. BMI changes were not statistically significant.
Conclusions:
Further study is needed to refine current telephonic health coaching programs for disease
management. This study suggests that the efficacy of telephonic health coaching in its current form is
not enough to improve BMI outcomes in patients with diabetes, and over the phone coaching alone is
insufficient to improve patient A1C levels and sustain them for long-term.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
1 articles.
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