Cargando…

Evaluation of a toolkit to improve cardiovascular disease screening and treatment for people with type 2 diabetes: protocol for a cluster-randomized pragmatic trial

BACKGROUND: The gap between the level of care recommended by evidence-based clinical practice guidelines and the actual care delivered to patients in practice has been well established. The Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) created an implementation strategy to improve the implementation of its 20...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shah, Baiju R, Bhattacharyya, Onil, Yu, Catherine, Mamdani, Muhammad, Parsons, Janet A, Straus, Sharon E, Zwarenstein, Merrick
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2867980/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20416080
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-11-44
_version_ 1782181018764050432
author Shah, Baiju R
Bhattacharyya, Onil
Yu, Catherine
Mamdani, Muhammad
Parsons, Janet A
Straus, Sharon E
Zwarenstein, Merrick
author_facet Shah, Baiju R
Bhattacharyya, Onil
Yu, Catherine
Mamdani, Muhammad
Parsons, Janet A
Straus, Sharon E
Zwarenstein, Merrick
author_sort Shah, Baiju R
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The gap between the level of care recommended by evidence-based clinical practice guidelines and the actual care delivered to patients in practice has been well established. The Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) created an implementation strategy to improve the implementation of its 2008 guidelines. This study will evaluate the impact of the strategy to improve cardiovascular disease (CVD) screening, prevention and treatment for people with diabetes. DESIGN: A pragmatic cluster-randomized trial will be conducted to evaluate the CDA's CVD Toolkit. All family physicians in Ontario, Canada were randomly allocated to receive the Toolkit, which includes several printed educational materials targeting CVD screening, prevention and treatment, either in spring 2009 (intervention arm) or in spring 2010 (control arm). Randomization occurred at the level of the practice. Forty family physicians from each arm will be recruited to participate, and the medical records for 20 of their diabetic patients at high risk for CVD will be retrospectively reviewed. Outcome measures will be assessed for each patient between July 2009 and March 2010. The primary outcome will be that the patient is receiving a statin. Secondary outcomes will include 1) the receipt of an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker, 2) various intermediate measures (A1c, blood pressure, LDL-cholesterol, total-/HDL-cholesterol ratio, body mass index and waist circumference), and 3) clinical inertia (the failure to change therapy in response to an abnormal A1c, blood pressure or cholesterol reading). The analysis will be carried out using multilevel hierarchical logistic regression models to account for the clustered nature of the data. The group assignment will be a physician-level variable. In addition, a process evaluation study with six focus groups of family physicians will assess the acceptability of the CDA's Toolkit and will explore factors contributing to any change or lack of change in behaviour, from the perspectives of family physicians. DISCUSSION: Printed educational materials for physicians have been shown to exert small-to-moderate changes in patient care. The CDA's CVD Toolkit is an example of a practice guideline implementation strategy that can be disseminated to a wide audience relatively inexpensively, and so demonstrating its effectiveness at improving diabetes care could have important consequences for guideline developers, policy makers and clinicians. TRIAL REGISTRATION: The trial is registered with http://www.clinicaltrials.gov, ID # NCT01026688
format Text
id pubmed-2867980
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-28679802010-05-12 Evaluation of a toolkit to improve cardiovascular disease screening and treatment for people with type 2 diabetes: protocol for a cluster-randomized pragmatic trial Shah, Baiju R Bhattacharyya, Onil Yu, Catherine Mamdani, Muhammad Parsons, Janet A Straus, Sharon E Zwarenstein, Merrick Trials Study protocol BACKGROUND: The gap between the level of care recommended by evidence-based clinical practice guidelines and the actual care delivered to patients in practice has been well established. The Canadian Diabetes Association (CDA) created an implementation strategy to improve the implementation of its 2008 guidelines. This study will evaluate the impact of the strategy to improve cardiovascular disease (CVD) screening, prevention and treatment for people with diabetes. DESIGN: A pragmatic cluster-randomized trial will be conducted to evaluate the CDA's CVD Toolkit. All family physicians in Ontario, Canada were randomly allocated to receive the Toolkit, which includes several printed educational materials targeting CVD screening, prevention and treatment, either in spring 2009 (intervention arm) or in spring 2010 (control arm). Randomization occurred at the level of the practice. Forty family physicians from each arm will be recruited to participate, and the medical records for 20 of their diabetic patients at high risk for CVD will be retrospectively reviewed. Outcome measures will be assessed for each patient between July 2009 and March 2010. The primary outcome will be that the patient is receiving a statin. Secondary outcomes will include 1) the receipt of an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker, 2) various intermediate measures (A1c, blood pressure, LDL-cholesterol, total-/HDL-cholesterol ratio, body mass index and waist circumference), and 3) clinical inertia (the failure to change therapy in response to an abnormal A1c, blood pressure or cholesterol reading). The analysis will be carried out using multilevel hierarchical logistic regression models to account for the clustered nature of the data. The group assignment will be a physician-level variable. In addition, a process evaluation study with six focus groups of family physicians will assess the acceptability of the CDA's Toolkit and will explore factors contributing to any change or lack of change in behaviour, from the perspectives of family physicians. DISCUSSION: Printed educational materials for physicians have been shown to exert small-to-moderate changes in patient care. The CDA's CVD Toolkit is an example of a practice guideline implementation strategy that can be disseminated to a wide audience relatively inexpensively, and so demonstrating its effectiveness at improving diabetes care could have important consequences for guideline developers, policy makers and clinicians. TRIAL REGISTRATION: The trial is registered with http://www.clinicaltrials.gov, ID # NCT01026688 BioMed Central 2010-04-23 /pmc/articles/PMC2867980/ /pubmed/20416080 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-11-44 Text en Copyright ©2010 Shah et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study protocol
Shah, Baiju R
Bhattacharyya, Onil
Yu, Catherine
Mamdani, Muhammad
Parsons, Janet A
Straus, Sharon E
Zwarenstein, Merrick
Evaluation of a toolkit to improve cardiovascular disease screening and treatment for people with type 2 diabetes: protocol for a cluster-randomized pragmatic trial
title Evaluation of a toolkit to improve cardiovascular disease screening and treatment for people with type 2 diabetes: protocol for a cluster-randomized pragmatic trial
title_full Evaluation of a toolkit to improve cardiovascular disease screening and treatment for people with type 2 diabetes: protocol for a cluster-randomized pragmatic trial
title_fullStr Evaluation of a toolkit to improve cardiovascular disease screening and treatment for people with type 2 diabetes: protocol for a cluster-randomized pragmatic trial
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of a toolkit to improve cardiovascular disease screening and treatment for people with type 2 diabetes: protocol for a cluster-randomized pragmatic trial
title_short Evaluation of a toolkit to improve cardiovascular disease screening and treatment for people with type 2 diabetes: protocol for a cluster-randomized pragmatic trial
title_sort evaluation of a toolkit to improve cardiovascular disease screening and treatment for people with type 2 diabetes: protocol for a cluster-randomized pragmatic trial
topic Study protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2867980/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20416080
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1745-6215-11-44
work_keys_str_mv AT shahbaijur evaluationofatoolkittoimprovecardiovasculardiseasescreeningandtreatmentforpeoplewithtype2diabetesprotocolforaclusterrandomizedpragmatictrial
AT bhattacharyyaonil evaluationofatoolkittoimprovecardiovasculardiseasescreeningandtreatmentforpeoplewithtype2diabetesprotocolforaclusterrandomizedpragmatictrial
AT yucatherine evaluationofatoolkittoimprovecardiovasculardiseasescreeningandtreatmentforpeoplewithtype2diabetesprotocolforaclusterrandomizedpragmatictrial
AT mamdanimuhammad evaluationofatoolkittoimprovecardiovasculardiseasescreeningandtreatmentforpeoplewithtype2diabetesprotocolforaclusterrandomizedpragmatictrial
AT parsonsjaneta evaluationofatoolkittoimprovecardiovasculardiseasescreeningandtreatmentforpeoplewithtype2diabetesprotocolforaclusterrandomizedpragmatictrial
AT straussharone evaluationofatoolkittoimprovecardiovasculardiseasescreeningandtreatmentforpeoplewithtype2diabetesprotocolforaclusterrandomizedpragmatictrial
AT zwarensteinmerrick evaluationofatoolkittoimprovecardiovasculardiseasescreeningandtreatmentforpeoplewithtype2diabetesprotocolforaclusterrandomizedpragmatictrial