This study involves two parts: a randomised controlled trial, and a nested qualitative study. The main aim of the trial is to evaluate the effectiveness of a pharmacist-led, medications-focused patient counselling on reducing the frequency of hypoglycaemia in older adults diagnosed with type 2 Diabetes Mellitus within 12 weeks in Jordan. The study hypothesis is that individualised patient counselling which is provided by pharmacists and involves recommendations about anti-diabetic medications will reduce the risk of hypoglycaemia by preventing further episodes in the elderly Jordanians with type 2 Diabetes Mellitus. The qualitative study aims at evaluating the experience of participants in both groups with the study (process evaluation). This involves exploring which components are effective and which are not with the reasons, the contextual factors affecting the delivery and implementation of the study and the intervention, and how the study and the intervention can be scaled up in the future.
Hypoglycaemia is the most serious adverse effect of diabetes treatment. Older adults are at the highest risk to develop hypoglycaemia. Several studies have established the important positive role of educational interventions on achieving glycaemic control and other clinical outcomes, however, there is still a lack in clinical trials that evaluate the impact of such type of interventions on hypoglycaemia risk, especially in older adults. Despite the increasing prevalence of chronic diseases such as diabetes in Jordan, pharmacists still provide traditional services rather than patient-centred services. The purpose of this research is to investigate the effect of pharmacist-led, individualised, and medications-focused patient counselling on reducing episodes of hypoglycaemia compared to the usual care in older Jordanians with type 2 Diabetes Mellitus within 12 weeks. This research is a prospective, open-label, randomised controlled trial that is conducted in the outpatient endocrinology and cardiology clinics at King Abdullah University Hospital in Jordan, with 204 elderly patients who had been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. Participants will be randomised in a 1:1 ratio into either the intervention (SUGAR Handshake) or the usual care groups. Each participant in the SUGAR Handshake group will receive a face-to-face individualised educational session with a pharmacist at the inclusion visit, a pictogram containing the main educational information, and a reinforcement of the educational session through a phone call at week 6 of the inclusion visit. They will also receive the usual care provided by the health care professionals at the outpatient clinics. On the other hand, patients in the usual care group will only receive the routine care provided at the outpatient clinics. The duration of the trial for each participant is 12 weeks. The qualitative study is performed through phone interviews with 8-12 participants of each group at week 6 of the inclusion visit. Participants are to be approached according to convenience sampling and the data will be analysed using content analysis.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
212
An interactive patient counselling session delivered by a pharmacist which mainly focuses on medication-related instructions towards preventing hypoglycaemia in addition to recommendations about hypoglycemia early recognition, causes, and treatment. The SUGAR Handshake is individualised according to shared decision making and each participant's characteristics. Components of the SUGAR Handshake intervention will be covered under five main domains: 1. Signs and symptoms of hypoglycemia. 2. Understanding the underlying causes of hypoglycaemia such as misuse of anti-diabetic medications. 3. Good glycaemic control and self-monitoring, which mainly includes instructions on handling the anti-diabetic medications. 4. Acknowledgement by the patient 5. Recap and summary The pictogram contains the main recommendations for easy recall by the participant. Moreover, the intervention will be reinforced by a phone call at week 6 of the inclusion visit.
King Abdullah University Hospital
Irbid, Jordan
Frequency of total episodes of hypoglycaemia
The frequency of hypoglycemia will be calculated as the number of total hypoglycemic episodes/person/ 12 weeks. Total hypoglycemia is defined as the summation of severe, symptomatic, and asymptomatic episodes of hypoglycaemia.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Frequency of severe hypoglycaemia
The frequency of severe hypoglycemia will be calculated as the number of severe hypoglycemic episodes/person/ 12 weeks. Severe hypoglycemia is defined as any event requiring the assistance of another person to administer carbohydrate and glucagon or take any other corrective actions, accompanied by neurological recovery after the corrective actions. Participants will be provided with diaries to document severe episodes of hypoglycemia
Time frame: 12 weeks
Frequency of asymptomatic hypoglycemia
The frequency of asymptomatic hypoglycemia will be calculated as the number of asymptomatic hypoglycaemia episodes/person/ 12 weeks. asymptomatic hypoglycaemia is defined as an event not accompanied by typical symptoms of hypoglycemia but with a measured plasma glucose concentration ≤70 mg/dL (≤3.9 mmol/L). Participants will be provided with diaries to document fasting blood glucose levels by which asymptomatic episodes will be diagnosed.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Frequency of symptomatic hypoglycemia
The frequency of symptomatic hypoglycemia will be calculated as the number of symptomatic hypoglycemic episodes/person/ 12 weeks. Symptomatic hypoglycemia is defined as an event during which the patient experiences typical symptoms of hypoglycaemia (sweating, dizziness, light-headedness, tremor, hunger, headache) whether they are accompanied by a measured plasma glucose concentration ≤70 mg/dL (≤3.9 mmol/L) or not. Participants will be provided with diaries to document symptomatic episodes of hypoglycemia.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Proportion of patients experiencing hypoglycaemia
proportion of patients who experience at least one hypoglycaemic attack of each type
Time frame: 12 weeks
Time to the first hypoglycaemic attack
the number of the day when a participant will experience the first hypoglycaemic attack of any type after randomisation.
Time frame: 12 weeks
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