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Virtual Diabetes Group Visits Across Health Systems

Recruiting
18 years of age
Both
Phase 2

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Overview

The purpose of this project is to evaluate the effectiveness of a virtual diabetes group visits on patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM).

Description

Managing diabetes can be complex and burdensome; patients must modify their diet, take medications, check their blood sugar, and visit their healthcare providers regularly. Diabetes group visits (GVs)-virtual group education and diabetes support, including goal setting-create a unique setting where patients can connect with peers and receive medical care and support. GVs can improve glycemic control and decrease healthcare utilization. GVs can provide patients with comprehensive care for their multimorbid chronic condition.

Virtual GVs provide an opportunity to adapt to the current trends of telehealth and the ability to increase reach and scalability across multiple sites. Before the model can be widely adopted, important questions about the effectiveness and implementation of the virtual diabetes GV model need to be addressed. The investigators propose to build on an established program of diabetes GVs. This proposal aims to implement the virtual GV model (VIDA: Virtual Diabetes Group Visits Across Health Systems) in two distinct health systems in the Chicago region. Access Community Health Network (ACCESS) is one of the largest federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) in the United States with 35 sites across the Chicago metropolitan area, providing care for 175,000 medically underserved and low-income patients each year, including over 25,000 patients with diabetes and 30,000 patients who are uninsured; 60% of ACCESS' patients are Hispanic and 30% are African-American. Advocate Health Care (ADVOCATE) is a large, diverse, integrated private not-for-profit health system that includes 26 hospitals and more than 500 ambulatory sites. The system provides care across more than 129 primary care clinics in Illinois serving over 117,000 patients, of which 27% identify as African American/Black and 15% identify as Hispanic/Latino. Both are community-based health systems serving low-income and communities of color in Chicago and are network partners of the Chicago Chronic Condition Equity Network (C3EN).

No studies have systematically implemented virtual diabetes GVs for adults with T2DM in the real-world primary care setting or across distinct health systems. The ability to train, implement, and evaluate virtual GVs across systems with different care models provides the opportunity to learn about adaptation and the barriers and facilitators for implementation. This proposed study will compare virtual diabetes GVs to usual care using a type I hybrid effectiveness-implementation design via a pragmatic cluster randomized trial.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Patient at a participating clinic (at least one visit in year prior to first GV)
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • ≥ 18 years old
  • A1C>8% within 6 months prior to first GV (we will first recruit patients with A1C>9%, then if spaces still available A1C>8.5%, then if spaces still available A1C>8%)
  • At least one additional cardiovascular condition (hypertension, heart disease, stroke, hyperlipidemia, peripheral vascular disease, or BMI ≥ 30)
  • English or Spanish speaking
  • PCP assented to recruiting patient
  • Patient provides written consent

Study details

T2DM (Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus), Hypertension, Heart Disease Chronic, Stroke, Hyperlipidemias

NCT06094491

University of Chicago

25 June 2024

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