Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00160017

Effectiveness and Cost-effectiveness of the Diabetes Integrated Care Breakthrough Collaborative

Effectiveness and Cost-effectiveness of the Diabetes Integrated Care Breakthrough Collaborative to Improve Diabetes Care, Its Health Outcomes and Economic Costs

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
1,861 (actual)
Sponsor
Radboud University Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The study tests whether implementing professional evidence-based guidelines and best practices for diabetes care -through participation of multidisciplinary teams in a Breakthrough collaborative- results in an improvement of diabetes care, its health outcomes and economic costs. Determinants of success are studied. Data on diabetes will also be used to better understand Breakthrough as an implementation or improvement method.

Detailed description

Diabetes mellitus as a chronic disease is a major and growing health care problem. Studies on the prevention of severe complications provide evidence for the necessity of tight control. Different interventions and models to achieve strict control and reduce diabetes related risks of complications are available. These are, however, not implemented in daily practice. Our study focuses on this implementation problem: it tests whether implementing professional evidence-based guidelines and best practices -through participation of multidisciplinary teams in the Breakthrough collaborative- results in an improvement of diabetes care, its health outcomes and economic costs. Data on diabetes will also be used to explore and better understand the Breakthrough model as an implementation method. Only uncontrolled observational studies have, so far, described the outcomes of Breakthrough collaboratives. They also describe significant differences between teams in specific improvements made in patient care and organisational performance, resulting in different implementation and medical costs. There is hardly any information regarding these costs and the cost-effectiveness of collaboratives, and little knowledge about how they could be made more effective. Insight is also needed into the factors that influence the success of individual teams. There are no data regarding the sustainability of improvements.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALBreakthrough collaborativeParticipants (professionals) participate in a Breakthrough Collaborative to improve diabetes care

Timeline

Start date
2005-01-01
Primary completion
2008-03-01
Completion
2008-03-01
First posted
2005-09-12
Last updated
2015-11-30

Locations

52 sites across 1 country: Netherlands

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00160017. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.