This is a randomized trial designed to determine if adoption of the chronic care model in conjunction with nurse case management, home telemonitoring, and home HbA1c monitoring can improve glycemic control compared to patients receiving usual case management. We hypothesize that nurse case management, with home telemonitoring of blood sugars and home HbA1c measurement will result in additional improvements in glycemic control compared to isolated nurse case management. Specifically, the telemonitoring group will have an HbA1c 0.5% lower compared to usual nurse case management. Secondary aims include an additional 5 mmHg improvement in systolic blood pressure (among patients with hypertension at the time of enrollment), improved patient satisfaction with treatment, improved medication adherence, reduced incidence of hypoglycemia, and reduced case manager time in the telemonitoring/home HbA1c group compared with usual caes management. The study will enroll 460 diabetic patients with HbA1c values greater than 8.5%, age 75 years or younger, who have a active land-line for telephone communication. Patients will be enrolled and actively case managed for 9 months.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
460
telephone contact with a case manager, home telemonitoring equipment for blood sugar and blood pressure, home HbA1c measurement
telephone contact with a case manager
Minneapolis VAMC
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Glycemic control (HbA1c)
Time frame: 9 months after enrollment
Systolic blood pressure control in patients with elevated blood pressure at baseline
Time frame: 9 months after enrollment
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