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. 2018 Mar;52(1):41–60. doi: 10.4314/gmj.v52i1.8
Study
No (Ref)
First Author,

Country,

Year of
publication
Participants characteristics,

Sample size (N),

Mean Age
Intervention (I) /Control (C) methods,

Follow up and Duration of study

Outcome measure

Outcomes/Conclusions




1 28
Lorig K.


USA


2009
Type 2 diabetes patients from
churches and senior centres

N=345 (I=186, C: 159)

Mean age= 66.7 (24–93 years)
I: 6-week community-based, peer-led
diabetes self-management program
(DSMP) consisting of 2½ hours weekly by
2 peer leaders. Class sizes ranged from 10
to 15.

After 6 months Intervention group had
additional 6 months of longitudinal follow
up.

C: Usual care, but offered DSMP after 6
months
A1C and body mass index
were measured at baseline,
6 months, and 12 months.
All other data were
collected by self-administered
questionnaires.
At 6 months, DSMP participants did not demonstrate significant
improvements in A1C as compared with controls (p>0.05)

Also there were significant improvements in symptoms of
hypoglycaemia, depression, communication with physicians, healthy
eating, and reading food labels at 6 months (P < 0.01


Conclusions:
A community-based, peer led diabetes programme for people with
diabetes without elevated A1C resulted in benefits including
significantly less hypoglycaemia but not in glycaemic control.


2 29

Guo X.H.

China

2014
Insulin-treated T2DM patients on
2 or more oral anti-diabetic drugs
and HbA1c >7.5% for >3 months

N=1511

Age=57.1 years
I: Structured diabetes education, including
8 models and 3 telephone follow-ups
(delivered by trained nurses) plus insulin
therapy. Follow up was 16 weeks.

C: Usual care plus insulin therapy.

All of them discontinued OADs except
biguanides and a-glucosidase inhibitors.
Primary endpoint was the
change in HbA1c from
baseline at 16 weeks.
Significant reductions in HbA1c from baseline in the education group
compared with controls (2.16% vs. 2.08%; P < 0.05).
Improvement in Morisky Medication Adherence Scale was greater in
the education group (P < 0.05).

No difference in overall incidence of hypoglycaemic events in the two
groups (education and control groups was 2.28 and 1.75 episodes per
person-year, respectively (P > 0.05).

Conclusion:
Structured education can promote the ability of patients to self-manage
and their compliance with medications, thereby achieving better
outcomes. There was no difference in overall incidence of
hypoglycaemic.