Structured Diabetes Education: virtual access was as effective as face-to-face access to a structured diabetes education programme (EMPOWER T2n) for people with type 2 diabetes in England

Author:

Sutton DonnaORCID,Palin RichardORCID,Swift JimORCID,Barker ChrisORCID,Pridige ClaireORCID,Ghosh SudipORCID

Abstract

AbstractIntroduction & objectivesStructured diabetes education (SDE) is an evidence-based intervention for type 2 diabetes. The goal of this study was to compare SDE whether accessed face to face or virtually and determine if any differences existed in key endpoint attainment. This study helps address the absence of evaluations comparing these access modalities.Research design and methodsAll data were sourced from English SDE participants themselves, and their General Practices and routinely collected for service evaluation between 2016 and 2023. All data were observational, and all participants accessed usual care. The primary endpoint was the increase in the percentage of patients with glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c) at target [48mmol/mol (International Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine) / 6.5% (National Glycohemoglobin Standardization Program)] in virtually accessed SDE participants (V-SDE) versus face-to-face accessed SDE participants (F2F-SDE) on unchanged medicines for glycaemia. All data were non-normally distributed. Wilcoxon signed rank tests were used to analyse paired data, Mann-Whitney U-tests used for independent data and Chi-square tests used for observed versus expected data.ResultsThe 3,493 SDE participants with pre and post HbA1c data had a 10.2mmol/mol (16.4%) reduction in HbA1c, 389 days post their pre-SDE HbA1c measure. In the 2,334 (66.8%) participants who remained on the same medicines regime, the mean reduction in HbA1c was 9.1mmol/mol (15.2%), (p<0.001). All 617 V-SDE participants had a mean reduction in HbA1c of 13.6mmol/mol (20.9%) vs. 9.5mmol/mol (15.3%) in all 2,876 F2F-SDE participants, (p<0.001). The V-SDE on unchanged medicines had superior reductions in HbA1c to F2F-SDE (11.6 [n=404] vs. 8.6mmol/mol [n=1930], p=0.019), respectively. The overall increase in medicines for glycaemia was +12.45% F2F-SDE versus +4.21% V-SDE, (p<0.001).The primary endpoint was the increase in the percentage of patients with HbA1c to target in V-SDE versus F2F-SDE in patients with unchanged medicines for glycaemia. Previous database analyses found a 30% increase in F2F-SDE patients at target who were on the same medicines regime. A non-inferiority limit was set at 10% for V-SDE versus F2F-SDE and required 360 patients per arm. The primary endpoint was attained with 52.2% of V-SDEs at target (+33.7%), versus the F2F-SDE gain of 29.6%. VSDE was not superior to F2F-SDE (p=0.16). Blood pressure, total cholesterol and weight were improved (all endpoints, p<0.001) with no differences between the interventions. Medicines use was unrecorded for these health endpoints.ConclusionsV-SDE met its non-inferiority goal, which was set in a population in which fewer V-SDE patients required increased medicines for glycaemia. These endpoints were subject to the limitations of unlinked, and routinely collected observational data.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference27 articles.

1. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). NICE guideline NG28. Type 2 diabetes in adults: management. December 2015, updated June 2022. https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng28/chapter/Recommendations#education

2. Quality Institute for Self Management and Education (QISMET). Accreditation Register. https://www.qismet.org.uk/accreditation/accreditation-register/ (accessed 20 February 2024)

3. Alignment between outcomes and minimal clinically important differences in the Dutch type 2 diabetes mellitus guideline and healthcare professionals’ preferences

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