TY - JOUR
T1 - Network of doctors for multimorbidity and diabetes — the NOMAD intervention
T2 - protocol for feasibility trial of multidisciplinary team conferences for people with diabetes and multimorbidity
AU - Bugge, Stine Jorstad
AU - Henriksen, Daniel Pilsgaard
AU - Damkier, Per
AU - Rahbek, Martin Torp
AU - Schousboe, Karoline
AU - Rothmann, Mette Juel
AU - Poulsen, Marianne Kjær
AU - Hansen, Camilla
AU - Nagarajah, Subagini
AU - Jensen, Per Bruno
AU - Johansson, Sofie Lock
AU - Panou, Vasiliki
AU - Schneider, Ida Ransby
AU - Pedersen, Charlotte Gjørup
AU - Andersen, Jonas Dahl
AU - Hangaard, Jørgen
AU - Zwisler, Ann Dorthe Olsen
PY - 2024/6/15
Y1 - 2024/6/15
N2 - Background: The prevalence of diabetes and coexisting multimorbidity rises worldwide. Treatment of this patient group can be complex. Providing an evidence-based, coherent, and patient-centred treatment of patients with multimorbidity poses a challenge in healthcare systems, which are typically designed to deliver disease-specific care. We propose an intervention comprising multidisciplinary team conferences (MDTs) to address this issue. The MDT consists of medical specialists in five different specialities meeting to discuss multimorbid diabetes patients. This protocol describes a feasibility test of MDTs designed to coordinate care and improve quality of life for people with diabetes and multimorbidity. Methods: A mixed-methods one-arm feasibility test of the MDT. Feasibility will be assessed through prospectively collected data. We will explore patient perspectives through patient-reported outcomes (PROs) and assess the feasibility of electronic questionnaires. Feasibility outcomes are recruitment, PRO completion, technical difficulties, impact of MDT, and doctor preparation time. During 17 months, up to 112 participants will be recruited. We will report results narratively and by the use of descriptive statistics. The collected data will form the basis for a future large-scale randomised trial. Discussion: A multidisciplinary approach focusing on better management of diabetic patients suffering from multimorbidity may improve functional status, quality of life, and health outcomes. Multimorbidity and diabetes are highly prevalent in our healthcare system, but we lack a solid evidence-based approach to patient-centred care for these patients. This study represents the initial steps towards building such evidence. The concept can be efficiency tested in a randomised setting, if found feasible to intervention providers and receivers. If not, we will have gained experience on how to manage diabetes and multimorbidity as well as organisational aspects, which together may generate hypotheses for research on how to handle multimorbidity in the future. Administrative information: Protocol version: 01 Trial registration: NCT05913726 — registration date: 21 June 2023.
AB - Background: The prevalence of diabetes and coexisting multimorbidity rises worldwide. Treatment of this patient group can be complex. Providing an evidence-based, coherent, and patient-centred treatment of patients with multimorbidity poses a challenge in healthcare systems, which are typically designed to deliver disease-specific care. We propose an intervention comprising multidisciplinary team conferences (MDTs) to address this issue. The MDT consists of medical specialists in five different specialities meeting to discuss multimorbid diabetes patients. This protocol describes a feasibility test of MDTs designed to coordinate care and improve quality of life for people with diabetes and multimorbidity. Methods: A mixed-methods one-arm feasibility test of the MDT. Feasibility will be assessed through prospectively collected data. We will explore patient perspectives through patient-reported outcomes (PROs) and assess the feasibility of electronic questionnaires. Feasibility outcomes are recruitment, PRO completion, technical difficulties, impact of MDT, and doctor preparation time. During 17 months, up to 112 participants will be recruited. We will report results narratively and by the use of descriptive statistics. The collected data will form the basis for a future large-scale randomised trial. Discussion: A multidisciplinary approach focusing on better management of diabetic patients suffering from multimorbidity may improve functional status, quality of life, and health outcomes. Multimorbidity and diabetes are highly prevalent in our healthcare system, but we lack a solid evidence-based approach to patient-centred care for these patients. This study represents the initial steps towards building such evidence. The concept can be efficiency tested in a randomised setting, if found feasible to intervention providers and receivers. If not, we will have gained experience on how to manage diabetes and multimorbidity as well as organisational aspects, which together may generate hypotheses for research on how to handle multimorbidity in the future. Administrative information: Protocol version: 01 Trial registration: NCT05913726 — registration date: 21 June 2023.
KW - Comorbidity
KW - Complex intervention
KW - Diabetes
KW - Feasibility trial
KW - Multidisciplinary team
KW - Multimorbidity
KW - Patient-reported outcome
KW - Process evaluation
U2 - 10.1186/s40814-024-01517-0
DO - 10.1186/s40814-024-01517-0
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 38879561
AN - SCOPUS:85196153556
SN - 2055-5784
VL - 10
JO - Pilot and Feasibility Studies
JF - Pilot and Feasibility Studies
M1 - 91
ER -