Abstract

BackgroundThe most efficient procedures to engage and guide healthcare professionals in collaborative processes that seek to optimize practice are unknown. The PREDIAPS project aims to assess the effectiveness and feasibility of different procedures to perform a facilitated interprofessional collaborative process to optimize type 2 diabetes prevention in routine primary care.MethodsA type II hybrid cluster randomized implementation trial was conducted in nine primary care centers of the Basque Health Service. All centers received training on effective healthy lifestyle promotion. Headed by a local leader and an external facilitator, centers conducted a collaborative structured process—the PVS-PREDIAPS implementation strategy—to adapt the intervention and its implementation to their specific context. The centers were randomly allocated to one of two groups: one group applied the implementation strategy globally, promoting the cooperation of all health professionals from the beginning, and the other performed it sequentially, centered first on nurses, who later sought the pragmatic cooperation of physicians. The following patients were eligible for inclusion: all those aged ≥ 30 years old with at least one known cardiovascular risk factor and an impaired fasting glucose level (≥ 110-125 mg/dl) but without diabetes who attended centers during the study period. The main outcome measures concerned changes in type 2 diabetes prevention practice indicators after 12 months.ResultsAfter 12 months, 3273 eligible patients at risk of type 2 diabetes had attended their family physician at least once, and of these, 490 (15%) have been addressed by assessing their healthy lifestyles in both comparison groups. The proportion of at-risk patients receiving a personalized prescription of lifestyle change was slightly higher (8.6%; range 13.5-5.9% vs 6.8%; range 7.2-5.8%) and 2.3 times more likely (95% CI for adjusted hazard ratio, 1.38-3.94) in the sequential than in the global centers, after 8 months of the intervention program implementation period. The probability of meeting the recommended levels of physical activity and fruit and vegetable intake were four- and threefold higher after the prescription of lifestyle change than only assessment and provision of advice. The procedure of engagement in and execution of the implementation strategy does not modify the effect of prescribing healthy habits (p interaction component of intervention by group, p > 0.05).DiscussionOur results show that the PVS-PREDIAPS implementation strategy manages to integrate interventions with proven efficacy in the prevention of type 2 diabetes in clinical practice in primary care. Further, they suggest that implementation outcomes were somewhat better with a sequential facilitated collaborative process focused on enhancing the autonomy and responsibility of nurses who subsequently seek a pragmatic cooperation of GPs.Trial registrationClinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT03254979. Registered 16 August 2017—retrospectively registered.

Highlights

  • The efficacy on lifestyle interventions for diabetes prevention has been well-established in clinical trials [1,2,3,4]

  • The proportion of at-risk patients receiving a personalized prescription of lifestyle change was slightly higher (8.6%; range 13.5-5.9% vs 6.8%; range 7.2-5.8%) and 2.3 times more likely in the sequential than in the global centers, after 8 months of the intervention program implementation period

  • Our results show that the PVS-PREDIAPS implementation strategy manages to integrate interventions with proven efficacy in the prevention of type 2 diabetes in clinical practice in primary care

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Summary

Introduction

The efficacy on lifestyle interventions for diabetes prevention has been well-established in clinical trials [1,2,3,4]. The Basque DEPLAN project for preventing type 2 diabetes (T2D), a multicenter clinical trial carried out in 14 Basque Health Service (Osakidetza) PC centers, demonstrated that an intervention focused on the promotion healthy lifestyles—four educational group or individual sessions plus an annual follow-up visit and regular contacts mainly via telephone calls—in patients with a high risk of developing T2D achieved a 32% reduction in the incidence of T2D [7]. Demonstration of its efficacy has not, been followed by feasible and sustainable translation of the intervention to clinical practice, mainly due to the difficulty of achieving engagement and commitment among staff of PC centers in the context of time constraints, heavy workload, lack of incentives, and an overload of health service initiatives [7, 8]. The PREDIAPS project aims to assess the effectiveness and feasibility of different procedures to perform a facilitated interprofessional collaborative process to optimize type 2 diabetes prevention in routine primary care

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