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Standardised self-management kits for children with type 1 diabetes: pragmatic randomised trial of effectiveness and cost-effectiveness. – DocWire…

March 15th, 2020 9:42 pm

This article was originally published here

Standardised self-management kits for children with type 1 diabetes: pragmatic randomised trial of effectiveness and cost-effectiveness.

BMJ Open. 2020 Mar 12;10(3):e032163

Authors: Noyes J, Allen D, Carter C, Edwards D, Edwards RT, Russell D, Russell IT, Spencer LH, Sylvestre Y, Whitaker R, Yeo ST, Gregory JW

AbstractOBJECTIVE: To estimate the effectiveness of standardised self-management kits for children with type 1 diabetes.DESIGN: Pragmatic trial with randomisation ratio of two intervention: one control. Qualitative process evaluation.SETTING: 11 diabetes clinics in England and Wales.PARTICIPANTS: Between February 2010 and August 2011, we validly randomised 308 children aged 6-18 years; 201 received the intervention.INTERVENTION: We designed kits to empower children to achieve glycaemic control, notably by recording blood glucose and titrating insulin. The comparator was usual treatment. OUTCOME MEASURES AT 3 AND 6 MONTHS: Primary: Diabetes Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL). Secondary: HbA1c; General PedsQL; EQ-5D; healthcare resource use.RESULTS: Of the five Diabetes PedsQL dimensions, Worry showed adjusted scores significantly favouring self-management kits at 3months (mean child-reported difference =+5.87; Standard error[SE]=2.19; 95% confidence interval [CI]) from +1.57to +10.18; p=0.008); but Treatment Adherence significantly favoured controls at 6months (mean child-reported difference=-4.68; SE=1.74; 95%CI from -8.10 to -1.25; p=0.008). Intervention children reported significantly worse changes between 3 and 6months on four of the five Diabetes PedsQL dimensions and on the total score (mean difference=-3.20; SE=1.33; 95%CI from -5.73 to -0.67; p=0.020). There was no evidence of change in HbA1c; only 18% of participants in each group achieved recommended levels at 6 months. No serious adverse reactions attributable to the intervention or its absence were reported.Use of kits was poor. Few children or parents associated blood glucose readings with better glycaemic control. The kits, costing 185, alienated many children and parents.CONCLUSIONS: Standardised kits showed no evidence of benefit, inhibited diabetes self-management and increased worry. Future research should study relationships between children and professionals, and seek new methods of helping children and parents to manage diabetes.TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN17551624.

PMID: 32169923 [PubMed as supplied by publisher]

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Standardised self-management kits for children with type 1 diabetes: pragmatic randomised trial of effectiveness and cost-effectiveness. - DocWire...

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