1. The Durability of an Intensive, Structured Education-Based Rehabilitation Protocol for Best Insulin Injection Practice: The ISTERP-2 Study
- Author
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Sandro Gentile, Giuseppina Guarino, Carmelo Alfrone, Carmine Romano, Felice Strollo, Teresa Della Corte, Fabrizio Loiacono, Giampiero Marino, Maria Pasquarella, Laura Giordano, Rossella Lamberti, Maurizio Capace, and Ersilia Satta
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Type 2 diabetes ,Hypoglycemia ,Injection technique ,Education ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Original Research ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,Insulin ,Lipohypertrophy ,Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus ,medicine.disease ,chemistry ,Glycated hemoglobin ,business - Abstract
Introduction Studies on the durability of an intensive, structured education protocol on best insulin injection practice are missing for people with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). The aim of this study was to assess the durability of an intensive, structured education-based rehabilitation protocol on best insulin injection practice in well-trained subjects from our previous intensive, multimedia intervention study registered as the ISTERP-1 study. A total of 158 subjects with T2DM from the well-trained group of the 6-month-long ISTERP-1 study, all of whom had successfully attained lower glucose levels compared to baseline levels with lower daily insulin doses and with less frequent and severe hypoglycemic episodes, participated in the present investigation involving an additional 6-month follow-up period, called the ISTERP-2 study. Methods Participants were randomized into an intervention group and a control group, depending on whether they were provided or not provided with further education refresher courses for 6 months. At the end of the 6 months, the two groups were compared in terms of injection habits, daily insulin dose requirement, number of severe or symptomatic hypoglycemic events, and glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels. Results Despite being virtually superimposable at baseline, the two groups behaved quite differently during the follow-up. The within-group analysis of observed parameters showed that the subjects in the intervention group maintained and even improved the good behavioral results learned during the ISTERP-1 study by further reducing both the rate of injection technique errors (p
- Published
- 2021