Assessment of a group-based comprehensive diabetes management program to improve glycemic control, quality of life and s
- PDF / 624,509 Bytes
- 8 Pages / 595.276 x 790.866 pts Page_size
- 9 Downloads / 167 Views
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Assessment of a group-based comprehensive diabetes management program to improve glycemic control, quality of life and self-care behavior in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus in a primary healthcare setting of a metropolitan city in India: CDMP MUM Trial Mandar Padmakar Baviskar 1
&
Sumitra Rangari 2 & Sandeep Mishra 3 & Biswendu Sundar Mohanta 4
Received: 26 September 2019 / Revised: 4 January 2020 / Accepted: 24 April 2020 # Research Society for Study of Diabetes in India 2020
Abstract Background Resource-poor primary health settings in an urban slum presented with special challenges in diabetes care. The study evaluated a need-based, patient-friendly, acceptable, appropriate package of care and its implementation in primary healthcare setup. Material and Methods An open-label two-arm parallel randomized controlled trial with 40 patients in the control group who received medical management as prescribed by physician and patients in the intervention group receiving usual medical care + group-based comprehensive diabetes management program. HbA1c, weight, BMI, Quality of Life Instrument for Indian Diabetes Patients (QOLID) scores, and audit of Self Care Inventory-Revised Version (SCI-R) were assessed at baseline and 6 months. Result There was a significant reduction in mean HbA1c levels in the intervention arm (8.44, SD = 1.802 to 7.56, SD = 1.87) as compared with the control arm (8.4, SD = 1.87 to 8.19, SD = 1.77). Multiple linear regression model (R2 = 0.886, ANOVA F (7, 72) = 79.733, p < 0.001) found a fall in blood sugar levels (β = − 0.511, p < 0.001), improvement in QOLID scores (β = 0.221, p = 0.004), increase in physical activity (β = 0.198, p = 0.006), and fall in BMI (β = 0.153, p = 0.009) to be predictive of change in HbA1c. Discussion The patient profile consisted predominantly of homemakers, with low formal education and belonging to lower socioeconomic strata. They depended primarily on the public health system for their health care needs and could benefit most from the implementation of the program. There was an improvement in knowledge, regular follow-up, compliance to medication, diet, and physical activity along with improvement in glycemic control, self-care behavior and quality of life of patients in the intervention arm. Keywords CDMP MUM . Diabetes mellitus . Urban slum . Group-based comprehensive care
Introduction * Mandar Padmakar Baviskar [email protected] Sumitra Rangari [email protected] Sandeep Mishra [email protected] Biswendu Sundar Mohanta [email protected] 1
Department of Community Medicine, Pravara Institute of Medical Sciences (DU), Loni, Tal-Rahata, Ahmednagar, Maharashtra, India
2
ESIS, Mumbai, India
3
Seth GS Medical College & KEM Hospital, Mumbai, India
4
Divisional Railway Hospital, Malda, India
India is presently home to 62 million diabetics, and by 2030, diabetes numbers are expected to cross the 100 million mark [1]. Adequate care of diabetics requires a formal and more structured involvement of the primary care sect
Data Loading...