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. 2016 Nov;14(6):540–551. doi: 10.1370/afm.1982

Table 1.

Descriptive Summary of the Characteristics of Included Studies

Study, Year Patients, No. Setting, Population Intervention Control Duration of Peer Training Peer Supervision Attendance Rates, Intensity
Keyserling et al,23 2002 133 United States: African American women
Mean HbA1c 11.1%
Same as control; also 3 group sessions and monthly telephone calls from a peer counselor for 12 mo
7 peer counselors for 67 patients
Individual counseling visits with nutritionist at mo 1, 2, 3, and 4 16 h None reported 81% of participants attended at least 1 peer counselor session, 30% attended 2 sessions, and 19% attended 3 sessions
Average phone calls per participant: 9.7
Lorig et al,26 2008 417 United States: Spanish-speaking patients
Mean HbA1c 7.41%
6-wk program:
2.5 h weekly led by 2 peer leaders
2 peers per 10–15 patients
Usual care 24 h Random observations Not reported
Lorig et al,25 2009 345 United States: white, non-Hispanic patients 67%
Mean HbA1C 6.72%
6-wk program:
2.5 h weekly led by 2 peer leaders
2 peers per 10–15 patients
Usual care 24 h Random observations Mean attendance of 4.9 of 6 sessions
Dale et al,32 2009 187 United Kingdom: white, non-Hispanic patients 96.65%
Mean HbA1c 8.55%
Peer supporter called participants after change in their diabetes care at days 7–10, 14–18, 28–35, 56–70, 120–150
1 peer called median of 10 patients
Usual care 2-d training program developed for the study None reported Mean number of calls each patient received: 4.5 (range = 1–6 calls; SD, 2.2)
Cade et al,31 2009 207 United Kingdom: white, European-origin patients 95%
Mean HbA1C 7.4%
Peer educators delivered 2-h education sessions per week for 7 wk
5 peer educators for 86 participants
Usual care Residential training course provided by the Expert Patients Programme of the National Health Service None reported Of 110 participants in intervention group, 18 attended only 1 session and 22 attended all 7 sessions
63 participants attended final diabetes-specific session
Heisler et al,22 2010 244 United States: Male veterans, white non-Hispanic 82%
Mean HbA1c 7.97%
Peer partners encouraged to call weekly
Three optional 1.5-h face-to-face sessions at 1, 3, and 6 mo
Usual care Initial 1.5-h training in peer communication skills Interactive voice response–facilitated telephone platform recorded call initiation, frequency, and duration 90% of peer pairs had at least 1 conversation; average number of calls per pair per month was 2.4, 1.7, 1.4, 1.0, 0.9, 0.8 for 6 consecutive mo
Philis-Tsimikas et al,27 t2011 207 United States: Mexican Americans
Mean HbA1c 10.4%
Weekly 2.5-h education sessions by peer educators for 8 wk Usual care 40 h of training, plus trainees cotaught 2 series of classes with their trainer and taught 2 series on their own, under observation by the trainer Classes were audio-recorded and reviewed using checklists Not reported
Smith et al,34 2011 388 Republic of Ireland: Cluster randomized
50% population low income
Ireland general demographics 94.3% white non-Hispanic
Mean HbA1c 7.2%
9 peer supporter–facilitated sessions over 2 y; at mo 1, at mo 2, and every 3 mo thereafter Usual care Two 3-h evening training sessions conducted by research teams Meetings were recorded Participants attended mean of 5 peer support meetings; 18% never attended a meeting
Long et al,24 2012 77 United States: African American veterans
Mean HbA1c 9.85%
Weekly telephone calls by peer mentors; 34 mentors and 39 participants Usual care Single 1-h one-on-one training session No supervision First month, average of 4 calls/mo; by 6 mo, average of 2 calls/mo
Gagliardino et al,37 2013 198 Argentina: Hispanic, nonminority in country of residence
Mean HbA1c 7.2%
4 weekly peer educator sessions of 90–120 min initially; 1 at 6 mo followed by weekly calls for 6 mo then biweekly calls for 3 mo
Additional face-to-face visits among peers and their supportees were scheduled every second month if specific issues warranted
4 weekly sessions of 90–120 min initially; 1 at 6 mo by educators 3-d intensive, structured, small group interactive course Diabetes knowledge of participants tested with multiple-choice questionnaire Not reported
Siminerio et al,29 2013 68 United States: white non-Hispanic ethnicity >80%
Mean HbA1c 8.65%
Same as control followed by monthly peer calls for 6 mo for diabetes self-management support 6 wk of CDE diabetes self-management education intervention 1-d peer training workshop for CDE with companion workbook-CDE then trained peers in 2-3–h small sessions Contact logs for communications; goal selections were tracked Average of 5.03 calls per participant by peer supporter lasting approximately 25–30 min
Thom et al,30 2013 299 United States: Hispanic 46.65%, African American 31.25%; coded as predominantly Hispanic
Mean HbA1c 9.95%
Telephone contacts with peers at least twice a month and 2 or more in-person contacts in 6 mo
Coaches worked with median of 7 patients
Usual care 36 h of training over 8 wk in either English or Spanish Not reported Median of 5 (range = 0–29) interactions with the peer health coach
123 patients (83%) had at least 1 interaction; most interactions (76.6%) were by telephone, and the remainder were in person
Chan et al,36 2014 628 China: Chinese speaking 100%
Mean HbA1c 8.2%
Same as control and peer supporter telephone calls: biweekly for 3 mo, then monthly for 3 mo, and then 1 call every other month for 6 mo; anticipated 15 min per call Comprehensive assessment, personalized report, 2-h nurse-led empowerment class, follow-up primary care visit with repeated laboratory assessment and mailing of follow-up reports Four 8-h training sessions Peer supporter completed and mailed checklists to document discussion items, duration of each call, and relevant remarks every 3 mo Median of 20 calls per patient
Simmons et al,33 2015 644 England: Cluster randomized factorial design; white, non-Hispanic >90%
Mean HbA1c 7.3%
Peer-led group education sessions once a month for at least 5 mo and telephone/e-mail for 1:1 counseling Usual care Main training 14 h plus 3.5 h diabetes education session Not reported 61.5% participants attended at least 1 education session; most participants had telephone or e-mail contacts with peers
Mean number of group attendances: 3.7
Safford et al,28 2015 424 United States: cluster randomized trial; African American >90%
Mean HbA1c 7.9%
Same as control and initial 45–60–min in-person or telephone get-to-know session with peer supporter followed by weekly calls for 2 mo followed by monthly calls for 8 mo 1 h of group diabetes education class, 5-min counseling session, and diabetes report card 12 h over 2 d Contacts documented on forms and random contacts with intervention participants Mean number of contacts: 13.3 (SD, 8.1) 8.3% of participants had no contacts
Ayala et al,21 2015 336 United States: predominantly Hispanic
Mean HbA1c 8.7%
8 telephone or in-person contacts with peer supporter in first 6 mo, then as needed contacts in the last 6 mo; 92% of participants had telephone contacts
5–8 patients per peer leader
Usual care 40–50 h Contact logs maintained and tracked by peer leader coordinator Median number of contacts per participant: 4 (range = 1–24) 7% received no intervention
McGowan,35 2015 361 Canada: race/ethnicity not given
Mean HbA1c 7.19%
Two participant groups received 2 varied types of peer-led self-management programs with varying components: weekly meetings for 6 wk Usual care 24 h Session attendance was logged Mean attendance for intervention group: 5 sessions

CDE = certified diabetes educator; HbA1c = hemoglobin A1c.