The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial demonstrated the importance of an ongoing, integrated approach to diabetes management. There is, however, a need for brief, low-intensity behavioral interventions to address self management issues. The present proposal will evaluate and refine such a promising approach for dietary self-management, arguably the most challenging aspect of the regimen for patients with Type II diabetes. This competing renewal application will test two key components of an intervention program based upon the investigators' conceptual model of diabetes self management. It will extend the previous research by determining the importance of follow-up telephone calls to the intervention package, and by evaluating the effectiveness of a new intervention component focused on maximizing social and community resources. The program will also be extended to be offered as a centralized resource for many different primary care practices, and will evaluate the participation rate among eligible patients. Three hundred adult patients with Type II diabetes will be randomly assigned to one of four conditions within a two (phone calls vs. no phone calls) by two (community resources vs. no community resources) design. Outcomes will be evaluated at 3, 6, and 12 month follow-ups on a variety of measures including dietary self management, physiologic (serum lipids, HbA-1-c) and quality of life variables. Process measures will include barriers to self care, awareness and use of community nutrition resources, and personal models of diabetes. At the conclusion of this trial there should be knowledge of the key components and intervention processes involved in a broadly applicable diabetes dietary self management intervention that is feasible to conduct in many outpatient settings.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01DK035524-14
Application #
2905327
Study Section
Behavioral Medicine Study Section (BEM)
Program Officer
Garfield, Sanford A
Project Start
1984-09-01
Project End
2000-12-31
Budget Start
1999-07-01
Budget End
2000-12-31
Support Year
14
Fiscal Year
1999
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Amc Cancer Research Center
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Denver
State
CO
Country
United States
Zip Code
80214
Glasgow, Russell E; Fisher, Lawrence; Strycker, Lisa A et al. (2014) Minimal intervention needed for change: definition, use, and value for improving health and health research. Transl Behav Med 4:26-33
Glasgow, Russell E; Strycker, Lisa A; King, Diane K et al. (2014) Understanding who benefits at each step in an internet-based diabetes self-management program: application of a recursive partitioning approach. Med Decis Making 34:180-91
Glasgow, Russell E; Kurz, Deanna; Dickman, Jennifer M et al. (2012) Linking internet-based diabetes self-management to primary care: lessons learned and implications for research translation and practice implementation. Transl Behav Med 2:313-21
Glasgow, Russell E; Kurz, Deanna; King, Diane et al. (2012) Twelve-month outcomes of an Internet-based diabetes self-management support program. Patient Educ Couns 87:81-92
Glasgow, Russell E; Christiansen, Steven M; Kurz, Deanna et al. (2011) Engagement in a diabetes self-management website: usage patterns and generalizability of program use. J Med Internet Res 13:e9
Paxton, Amy E; Strycker, Lisa A; Toobert, Deborah J et al. (2011) Starting the conversation performance of a brief dietary assessment and intervention tool for health professionals. Am J Prev Med 40:67-71
King, Diane K; Glasgow, Russell E; Leeman-Castillo, Bonnie (2010) Reaiming RE-AIM: using the model to plan, implement, and evaluate the effects of environmental change approaches to enhancing population health. Am J Public Health 100:2076-84
Glasgow, Russell E (2010) Interactive media for diabetes self-management: issues in maximizing public health impact. Med Decis Making 30:745-58
Glasgow, Russell E; Kurz, Deanna; King, Diane et al. (2010) Outcomes of minimal and moderate support versions of an internet-based diabetes self-management support program. J Gen Intern Med 25:1315-22
Glasgow, Russell E (2010) HMC research translation: speculations about making it real and going to scale. Am J Health Behav 34:833-40

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