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49-LB: Use of Financial Incentives to Promote Adolescent Type 1 Diabetes Self-Management—A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial

Authors :
FAISAL MALIK
TOM CHEN
MARIA MANZUETA
JOYCE YI-FRAZIER
CATHERINE PIHOKER
JESSICA L. LEBLANC
SEEMA K. SHAH
DAVENE WRIGHT
Source :
Diabetes. 71
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Diabetes Association, 2022.

Abstract

Background: Providing individuals with immediate, consistent inducements for health behaviors that do not provide proximal tangible benefits may promote adherence to diabetes self-management behaviors. Objective: To evaluate whether financial incentives lead to improvement in glycemic control and self-management behaviors in adolescents with type 1 diabetes. Methods: We conducted a randomized controlled crossover study with 12-18 year olds with type 1 diabetes. Adolescents self-selected target self-management behaviors (e.g., increase continuous glucose monitor [CGM] sensor wear time) and outcome goals (e.g., improve time in range [TIR]) and could earn up to $180 in each 3-month intervention cycle. Adolescents cycled through 3 study arms every 3 months: gain-framed payment where adolescents earned money for meeting behavioral goals, loss-framed payment where adolescents lost a portion of a weekly payment for not meeting behavioral goals, and usual care. Adolescents earned or lost $1.75 per day in the financial incentives arms, and a $2.75 weekly bonus for meeting their outcome-based goal. Goals were modeled against study arms with generalized linear mixed models to account for the longitudinal nature of the crossover design. Results: Out of 39 participants (mean age 16.1 years, 54% male, mean baseline HbA1c 9.42%, 38% insulin pump use, 95% CGM use) , 34 completed the trial. Mean HbA1c aggregated over all interventions was lower compared to baseline at 9.07% (p=0.13) and there was no difference in HbA1c among the 3 arms. Compared to the mean TIR for those under usual care of 39%, mean TIR under gain- and loss-frames were 45% (p Conclusions: Financial incentives can improve adolescent self-management behaviors and time in range in the short term and merits further longitudinal study to evaluate the effects on glycemic control and health care utilization. Disclosure F. Malik: n/a. T. Chen: None. M. Manzueta: None. J. Yi-frazier: None. C. Pihoker: None. J. L. Leblanc: None. S. K. Shah: None. D. Wright: None. Funding American Diabetes Association (1-18-ICTS-100)

Details

ISSN :
00121797
Volume :
71
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Diabetes
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bcf111dfdcda9ef6a722c19f5008ef1f