1092-P: Effectiveness of a Hybrid Care Model for Type 2 Diabetes —A Three-Month Evaluation

Continuous monitoring in diabetes care enhances access, convenience, adherence, and glycemic control. Challenges in digital-only solutions include trust-building and limitations in face-to-face interactions, along with the lack of engagement by care teams outside the clinic setting. A hybrid model w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Diabetes (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2024-06, Vol.73 (Supplement_1), p.1
Hauptverfasser: ALMARZOOQI, IHSAN, ZAKARIA, HALA, CACCELLI, MILENA, OZKAN, CIGDEM, BANGAYAN, JESTONI, DANDAN, MIRABELLE C., JANE DIVINO, DIANNE, ALEABOVA, SOFIA, SAID, YOUSEF, HASHEMI, ALI
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container_issue Supplement_1
container_start_page 1
container_title Diabetes (New York, N.Y.)
container_volume 73
creator ALMARZOOQI, IHSAN
ZAKARIA, HALA
CACCELLI, MILENA
OZKAN, CIGDEM
BANGAYAN, JESTONI
DANDAN, MIRABELLE C.
JANE DIVINO, DIANNE
ALEABOVA, SOFIA
SAID, YOUSEF
HASHEMI, ALI
description Continuous monitoring in diabetes care enhances access, convenience, adherence, and glycemic control. Challenges in digital-only solutions include trust-building and limitations in face-to-face interactions, along with the lack of engagement by care teams outside the clinic setting. A hybrid model where providers incorporate both remote data monitoring and engagement with in-person visits would address these challenges. The aim of this study is to evaluate the impact of implementing the hybrid care approach on patients with T2D on glycemic control and clinical outcomes. A retrospective case-control observational study over 3 months by a hybrid provider (GluCare.Health) in the UAE included patients with T2D (n=262). The case group had both in-clinic visits and bi-weekly virtual engagements via an app that included a range of caregivers (physicians, dietitians, educators and coaches, n=162). The control group only conducted in-clinic visits without virtual engagement mimicking traditional, episodic care (n=100). Engagement data included dietary, lifestyle, medication, exercise and continuous glucose monitoring interactions. The case group (hybrid model) showed significant HbA1c improvements (-2.19%) (-25%) compared to the control group (-0.10%). Patients with higher baseline HbA1c (≥ 9.0%) experienced greater reductions (-3.67%) (-34%). The case group also showed improvements in weight (-6%), BMI (-6%), LDL (-21%), total cholesterol (-17%), and CVD risk (-41%). The control group had smaller improvements (p >0.05). Engagement strongly correlated with better outcomes; patients with ≥11 interactions (over 90 days) showed significant reductions in HbA1c (-2.38%) and weight (-6.00 kg) in comparison with those
doi_str_mv 10.2337/db24-1092-P
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Challenges in digital-only solutions include trust-building and limitations in face-to-face interactions, along with the lack of engagement by care teams outside the clinic setting. A hybrid model where providers incorporate both remote data monitoring and engagement with in-person visits would address these challenges. The aim of this study is to evaluate the impact of implementing the hybrid care approach on patients with T2D on glycemic control and clinical outcomes. A retrospective case-control observational study over 3 months by a hybrid provider (GluCare.Health) in the UAE included patients with T2D (n=262). The case group had both in-clinic visits and bi-weekly virtual engagements via an app that included a range of caregivers (physicians, dietitians, educators and coaches, n=162). The control group only conducted in-clinic visits without virtual engagement mimicking traditional, episodic care (n=100). Engagement data included dietary, lifestyle, medication, exercise and continuous glucose monitoring interactions. The case group (hybrid model) showed significant HbA1c improvements (-2.19%) (-25%) compared to the control group (-0.10%). Patients with higher baseline HbA1c (≥ 9.0%) experienced greater reductions (-3.67%) (-34%). The case group also showed improvements in weight (-6%), BMI (-6%), LDL (-21%), total cholesterol (-17%), and CVD risk (-41%). The control group had smaller improvements (p &gt;0.05). Engagement strongly correlated with better outcomes; patients with ≥11 interactions (over 90 days) showed significant reductions in HbA1c (-2.38%) and weight (-6.00 kg) in comparison with those &lt;11. 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The GluCare.Health hybrid model demonstrates promising outcomes in Type 2 diabetes management with a strong correlation between the number of remote engagement and outcomes in comparison to results seen in the physical-only (traditional-care like) control group.</abstract><cop>New York</cop><pub>American Diabetes Association</pub><doi>10.2337/db24-1092-P</doi></addata></record>
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source EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Cholesterol
Diabetes
Diabetes mellitus (non-insulin dependent)
Disease management
Glucose monitoring
Low density lipoprotein
title 1092-P: Effectiveness of a Hybrid Care Model for Type 2 Diabetes —A Three-Month Evaluation
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