The purpose of the study is to evaluate the feasibility and impact of an automated phone system in monitoring and improving self-care and health outcomes among patients with diabetes and/or hypertension in Bolivia, in addition to assessing the additional benefit of support from a family member or friend.
All patients will receive weekly automated calls with feedback to the clinical team. Blood pressures will be taken for all patients by researchers and finger-stick blood glucose readings will be taken at baseline for diabetic patients only and if possible, at follow-up. Fingersticks will use the patient's own glucometer or standard home glucometers donated by the project to the clinic. Patients will be informed about their blood pressure results; and, the clinic will be alerted if the systolic BP exceeds 150. If participants enroll with a CarePartner, they will be randomized to have their CarePartner receive weekly automated updates focused on symptom monitoring and patient self-care (HITCM+CP) versus usual care (no updates to CarePartner), HITCM-only. All participants will receive a weekly 10-15 minute automated phone call to their cell phone for disease assessment and self-care support for up to 16 weeks. Some patients with hypertension may be provided with in-home cuffs for measurement of blood pressure throughout the study. During enrollment, the research team will explain how the cuffs are used, as well as how to work the automated phone system. During patients' automated calls, they will be asked questions about their self-care relevant to their diagnosis, blood pressure regimen and readings (hypertension only), diet, glucose monitoring and symptoms of high/low blood sugar (diabetes only) and medication adherence. Based on the patient's self-report, they will receive targeted suggestions for how to improve their self-management. No identifying information is included in the automated call sent to the patient's phone other than the patient's first name. At the end of each automated call, patients will hear the phone number of their clinic, which they can call for a health problem or to disenroll from the program. At the time of recruitment, an initial automated call will be sent to the patient's phone so that they can learn what to expect and have the chance to ask questions of the research associate. In the event that the patient reports a health or self-care problem during their call (i.e., the patient reports rarely or never taking their medication), a report will automatically be generated and sent by email to the research team plus the patient's designated clinician so that follow-up can take place. The secure email address will be verified with each clinician, and be password protected. The intervention will last up to 16 weeks, after which the patient will have a follow-up meeting with the research team and will complete a survey about the program. All follow-ups will take place either in person or over the phone. Patients will receive an incentive at follow-up at no more than $10 USD.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
110
HITCM-only group: patients receive weekly automated calls with feedback to the clinical team.
HITCM + CP group: patients receive weekly automated calls with feedback to the clinical team and their CarePartner receives updates via phone or email.
El Servicio Departmental de Salud (SEDES) affiliated clinics
La Paz, Bolivia
Change from baseline on self-care behaviors and health at 16 weeks (questionnaire)
Time frame: Up to 16 weeks
Patient satisfaction (satisfaction questionnaire)
Time frame: Up to 16 weeks
Evaluate program feasibility (questionnaire, satisfaction, and usage rates)
Time frame: Up to 16 weeks
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