At a glance
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Nurse-run, Telephone-based Intervention to Improve Lipids in Diabetics
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Phone Counseling and Standard Clinical Care for Type 1 Diabetes and Type 2 Diabetes. Completed, enrolled 762 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
The current project is evaluating the effect of a nurse-administered phone care in diabetes to improve access to care and healthcare delivery. The setting is a federally qualified community health center serving over 1600 diabetic patients, 80% of whom are Latino. Using our diabetes registry, we have randomly assigned 762 patients to either participate in a telephone-based, nurse-run outreach program (N=381) or to continue with usual care(N=381). Three of our registered nurses learned algorithms addressing management of cholesterol, blood pressure, kidney disease, aspirin use, eye screening, and pneumovax and influenza vaccines. The program began recruitment in September 2005 and has finished follow up in May 2007. The program initially focused only on cholesterol management utilizing national guidelines and algorithms on patients with elevated cholesterol (LDL) levels but has expanded to include glycemic and blood pressure control. We found that Registered Nurses were able and willing to provide telephone care to diabetic patients according to moderately complex algorithms and to track patient data electronically with overall job satisfaction. Overall, the nurses have expressed enthusiasm but have also experience frustrations with maintaining contact and improving motivation in patients. The impact of this program on diabetes outcomes and its cost-effectiveness is currently being analyzed with the goal of implementing this program in our institution.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Patient were contacted on a periodic basis via telephone to address there diabetes care.
Patients in the usual care or control group were contacted at the beginning of the study only if they had not had an LDL level in the previous 12 months. A letter requesting their presentation for an LDL test was sent to their last known address along with a lab slip and a reminder to schedule an appointment with their PCP for follow-up of results. No additional contact was made with them by the study nurses.