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What Happens After Health Coaching? Observational Study 1 Year Following a Randomized Controlled Trial.

Authors :
Sharma, Anjana E
Sharma, Anjana E
Willard-Grace, Rachel
Hessler, Danielle
Bodenheimer, Thomas
Thom, David H
Sharma, Anjana E
Sharma, Anjana E
Willard-Grace, Rachel
Hessler, Danielle
Bodenheimer, Thomas
Thom, David H
Source :
Annals of family medicine; vol 14, iss 3, 200-207; 1544-1709
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

PurposeHealth coaching is effective for chronic disease self-management in the primary care safety-net setting, but little is known about the persistence of its benefits. We conducted an observational study evaluating the maintenance of improved cardiovascular risk factors following a health coaching intervention.MethodsWe performed a naturalistic follow-up to the Health Coaching in Primary Care Study, a 12-month randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing health coaching to usual care for patients with uncontrolled diabetes, hypertension, or hyperlipidemia. Participants were followed up 24 months from RCT baseline. The primary outcome was the proportion at goal for at least 1 measure (hemoglobin A1c, systolic blood pressure, or LDL cholesterol) that had been above goal at enrollment; secondary outcomes included each individual clinical goal. Chi-square tests and paired t-tests compared dichotomous and continuous measures.Results290 of 441 participants (65.8%) participated at both 12 and 24 months. The proportion of patients in the coaching arm of the RCT who achieved the primary outcome dropped only slightly from 47.1% at 12 to 45.9% at 24 months (P = .80). The proportion at goal for hemoglobin A1c dropped from 53.4% to 36.2% (P = .03). All other clinical metrics had small, nonsignificant changes between 12 and 24 months.ConclusionsResults support the conclusion that most improved clinical outcomes persisted 1 year after the completion of the health coaching intervention.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Annals of family medicine; vol 14, iss 3, 200-207; 1544-1709
Notes :
application/pdf, Annals of family medicine vol 14, iss 3, 200-207 1544-1709
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367521940
Document Type :
Electronic Resource