A Hybrid Effectiveness-implementation Trial to Reduce Diabetes Distress in Teenagers

NCT06709755 · Status: RECRUITING · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 360

Last updated 2024-11-29

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

The investigators will assess both effectiveness (primary) and implementation (secondary) outcomes for a distress-reducing intervention, Supporting Teen Problem Solving (STePS). STePS has already undergone an efficacy trial. The current study allows for evaluating the outcomes of STePS by delivering it in real-world settings, using real-world providers. The investigators will train these behavioral health providers who are already embedded in diabetes clinics to use the STePS intervention. The investigators will also compare two approaches to intervention delivery: in-person versus telehealth. The investigators have recruited 6 different study sites across the country, representing diversity in rural vs. urban, public vs private insurance, as well as in ethnic and racial background of the participants. 360 teens will be enrolled and randomized to either STePS or an educational control group on a 1:1:1 basis at each of our 6 study sites: STePS in-person (n=120), STePS telehealth (n=120), or educational control via telehealth (n=120).

All 3 groups will be delivered as 4.5-month interventions, consisting of 9 sessions offered twice per month. Quantitative data (surveys) will be collected for all participants at baseline, immediately post-intervention, and 6 \& 12 months post-intervention. Qualitative data will also be collected post-intervention through focus groups.

Aim 1. To test, in 360 teens across 6 clinical sites, the effectiveness of STePS in improving diabetes- specific emotional distress and preventing worsening glycemic control, both immediately post intervention and over time. Hypothesis 1a: STePS will lead to clinically meaningful and statistically significant improvements in diabetes distress. Hypothesis 1b: STePS will prevent the worsening of glycemic control (A1C and Time in Range). These hypotheses are consistent with the efficacy trial and will prove effectiveness when implemented in real- world settings.

Aim 2. To assess the implementation of STePS among key stakeholders (teen participants, interventionists). Recruitment, enrollment, representativeness, feasibility, acceptability, appropriateness, fidelity, and costs will be assessed as well as preferred implementation approaches. Hypothesis 2a. Stakeholders will find few perceived barriers to implementing STePS and many perceived facilitators for adopting it in their clinical settings. Hypothesis 2b. Implementation strategies will be plausible in diabetes clinics across the country.

Conditions

  • Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Supporting Teen Problem Solving

STePS is a group-based, teen-focused intervention aimed at reducing diabetes-specific emotional distress and building diabetes resilience. STePS is grounded in both cognitive-behavioral and social problem-solving theories, which recognize the interrelationships among difficult situations, beliefs related to the cause and consequences of those situations, and the emotional and behavioral consequences of those beliefs, and which addresses problem solving strategies that influences ones' adaptive functioning in real-life social settings, distinguishing between problem solving and solution implementation. STePS reduces distress by teaching: 1) emotion regulation, helping teens learn to link beliefs, emotions, and behaviors; to challenge negative thinking by evaluating the accuracy of one's beliefs; and learning new coping skills.2) perspective taking, helping teens learn to identify their own thinking style.

BEHAVIORAL

Diabetes Education

Arm Description: The Participants will receive diabetes education directed toward adolescents matching time, group experience and homework assignments, delivered virtually

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • American Diabetes Association

    collaborator OTHER
  • Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation

    collaborator OTHER
  • Ann & Robert H Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • Jill Weissberg-Benchell, Ph.D. · Ann & Robert H Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago

Study Design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Model
PARALLEL

Eligibility

Min Age
14 Years
Max Age
18 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2024-07-10
Primary Completion
2029-03-15
Completion
2029-03-15

Countries

  • United States

Study Locations

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Entities

Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT06709755 on ClinicalTrials.gov