NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07423351
Telemedicine-Based Behavioral Intervention to Improve Outcomes Among Diabetic Patients
The goal of this quasi-experimental clinical study is to learn whether a telemedicine-based behavioral intervention can improve health outcomes among adult patients with diabetes receiving care at tertiary hospitals in Northwest Amhara, Ethiopia.
The main questions it aims to answer are:
* Does a telemedicine-based behavioral intervention improve glycemic control (HbA1c) among diabetic patients?
* Does the intervention improve medication adherence among diabetic patients?
* Does the intervention improve diabetes self-care practices?
* Does the intervention increase patients' knowledge about diabetes?
* Does the intervention reduce hospital admissions among diabetic patients?
We will compare patients who receive telemedicine-based counseling with patients who receive usual care to see if the intervention improves glycemic control, medication adherence, self-care practices, diabetes knowledge, and reduces hospital admissions.
Participants will:
* Receive structured telephone-based education every two weeks for three months (intervention group only)
* Participate in 30-50-minute counseling sessions during the first call and 15-30 Minutes sessions during subsequent calls (intervention group only)
* Receive education on diabetes basics, nutrition and meal planning, physical activity, medication management, blood glucose monitoring, complication prevention, and psychosocial support (intervention group only)
* Engage in interactive discussions and receive individualized guidance from trained nurses (intervention group only)
* Continue routine diabetes care at the hospital (both groups)
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Diabete Mellitus
Diabetes Knowledge Score