Glasgow, R.E., USA, 2003 |
-
Clinical: Glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) determination was based on turbidimetric immunoinibition using hemolized whole blood, with the Hitachi 717; Block/NCI Fat Screener scale
-
Behavioral: Kristal Fat and Fiber Behavior
-
Psychological: Diabetes Support Scale; Center for Epidemiologic Studies–Depression scale
-
Literacy: American Diabetes Association Provider Recognition Program
|
Glasgow, R.E., USA, 2006 |
-
Clinical: Block/NCI Fat Screener scale; National Glycohemoglobin Standardization Program (NGSP) Roche methodologies; enzymatic methods
-
Behavioral: NCI Fruit and Vegetable Screener
-
Psychological: Diabetes Distress Scale; Patient Health Questionnaire
-
Literacy *
|
Petkova, V.B., Bulgaria, 2006 |
|
Song, M., Korea, 2009 |
-
Clinical: HbA1c levels were measured using a high-performance liquid chromatography technique with a Variant II analyzer (Bio-Rad, Montreal, QC, Canada)
-
Behavioral: The self-report questionnaire on adherence
|
Lujan, J., USA, 2007 |
-
Clinical: Glycemic control for HbA1c levels was measured by a finger-stick procedure to obtain the blood and a Bayer 2000 analyzer to analyze the sample
-
Psychological: Bilingual Diabetes Health-Belief Model
-
Literacy: Bilingual Diabetes Knowledge Questionnaire
|
Hill-Briggs, F., USA, 2008 |
|
Y |
Wallace, A.S., USA, 2009 |
| N |
-
Behavioral: Patient Activation Measure
-
Psychological: Diabetes Distress Scale
-
Literacy: Test of Functional Health Literacy for Adults
|
Hamuleh, M., Iran, 2010 |
|
Hill-Briggs, F., USA, 2011 |
-
Clinical: HbA1c was measured using high-pressure liquid chromatography; LDL and HDL were measured using standard techniques; blood pressure was assessed using a random-zero sphygmomanometer
-
Behavioral: Summary of Diabetes Self-Care Activities scale
-
Psychological: Test Health Problem-Solving Scale
-
Literacy: Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease Knowledge
|
Hill-Briggs, F., USA, 2011 |
Rct |
NR |
clinical, behavioral, psychological, literacy |
56 (29 intensive intervention; 26 condensed intervention) |
61.1 (11.0) |
Carter, E.L., USA, 2011 | 61.5 (10.9) |
| Program scored as helpful and easy to understand. At immediate post intervention, participants in both programs demonstrated knowledge gain. At 3 months post intervention, only the intensive intervention was effective in improving knowledge, problem-solving skills, self-care, and HbA1c levels. |
|
|
Carter, E.L., USA, 2011 |
Rct |
Osborn, C.Y., USA, 2011 |
-
Clinical *
-
Behavioral *
-
Psychological *
-
Literacy *
| 30 min biweekly |
clinical |
47 |
52 |
49 |
Improvement in health outcomes and responsibility for self-health together with “other benefits’’. |
Osborn, C.Y., USA, 2011 |
Rct |
Taghdisi, M.H., Iran, 2012 |
| expected to be completed in 5 days |
clinical, behavioral, psychological, literacy |
118 |
| 56.7 (10.1) |
NR |
At 3-months: increased level of participants reading food labels and improvement in adherence to diet recommendations. No significant differences between the two groups on adjusted group means for physical activity and HbA1c levels. |
|
Taghdisi, M.H., Iran, 2012 |
Quasi-experimental case-control study |
Castejón, A.M., USA, 2013 |
| 20–30 min |
psychological |
78 |
| 49 |
NR |
No significant increase in the mean score of quality of life. Significant differences in physical health, self-evaluation of quality of life, and self-assessment of health. |
|
|
Castejón, A.M., USA, 2013 |
Rct |
Swavely, D., USA, 2014 |
| half a day session + 2 × 60 min consultation |
clinical |
43 |
| 55 (10) |
54 (9) |
Greater BMI and HbA1c levels reduction. No significant difference in blood glucose, blood pressure, or lipid levels. |
|
|
Swavely, D., USA, 2014 |
Pre-post study |
13 h |
clinical, behavioral, psychological, literacy |
106 |
56.8 (10.4) |
NR |
Significant improvements in diabetes knowledge, self-efficacy, and three self-care domains, such as diet, foot care, and exercise. At 3 months, levels of HbA1c decreased. No significant improvements in the frequency of blood glucose testing. |
Calderón, J.L., USA, 2014 |
|
Calderón, J.L., USA, 2014 |
Rct |
13 min video |
literacy |
240 |
NA |
NA |
No differences in the increase of DHLS scores occurred in both groups, but when adjusting for baseline DHLS score, sex, age, and insurance status, intervention group performed better. For participants with inadequate literacy levels, health literacy scores significantly increased. |
Koonce, T.Y., USA, 2015 |
|
Koonce, T.Y., USA, 2015 |
Rct |
NR |
literacy |
128 |
54 (12.1) |
53 (9.6) |
DKT results at 2 weeks showed better performance on all literacy domains. |
Kim, M.T., USA, 2015 |
Kim, M.T., USA, 2015 |
-
Clinical *
-
Behavioral: Summary of Diabetes Self-Care Activities scale
-
Psychological: Stanford Chronic Disease Self-Efficacy scale; Diabetes Quality-of-Life Measure (DQOL)
-
Literacy: Diabetes Knowledge Test (DKT)
|
Rct |
weekly 2 h sessions × 6 weeks |
clinical, behavioral, psychological, literacy |
209 |
59.1 (8.4) |
58.3 (8.5) |
At 12 months: reduction in HbA1c levels and improvement in diabetes-related self-efficacy and quality of life. |
Ichiki, Y., Japan, 2016 |
Ichiki, Y., Japan, 2016 |
|
Pre-post study |
20 min sessions |
clinical |
35 |
Protheroe J., UK, 2016 |
| 73.5 (12.2) |
Behavioral: Summary of Diabetes Self-Care Activities Measure
-
Psychological: Diabetes Quality of Life Brief Clinical Inventory for Quality of Life; EQ5D for health-related Quality of Life; Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-Being; Brief Illness Perception Score; Quality of Life SF12
-
Literacy: Newest Vital Sign U
| NR |
Education was effective in participants with high baseline HbA1c levels (>8%) and poor understanding of their treatment. |
Protheroe, J. UK, 2016 |
Rct |
Bartlam B.,UK, 2016 | NR |
clinical, behavioral, psychological, literacy |
76 |
64.7 (11.2) |
| 61.5 (10.1) |
Participants in the LHT arm had significantly improved mental health and illness perception. The intervention was associated with lower resource use, better patient self-care management, and better QALY profile at 7-month follow-up. |
| |
Bartlam, B. UK, 2016 |
Rct |
NR |
literacy |
40 |
43 |
NR |
The intervention was acceptable to patients and, additionally, it resulted in behaviour changes. |
|
Hung, J.Y., Taiwan, 2017 |
|
Hung, J.Y., Taiwan, 2017 |
Quasi-experimental |
1.5 h × 7 weeks |
Lee, S.J., Korea, 2017 |
-
Clinical: HbA1c, blood pressure, and serum lipids
-
Behavioral: The Korean version of the Summary of Diabetes Self-Care Activities Questionnaire
-
Psyhological: Health Belief Scale for Diabetes; The Diabetes Management Self-Efficacy Scale for Older Adults
-
Literacy: Korean Health Literacy Assessment Tool; Diabetes Self-Management Knowledge; The Diabetes Self-Management Knowledge for Older Adults
| clinical, behavioral, psychological, literacy |
95 |
61.3 (8.0) |
58.5 (9.1) |
Improvement in coping with disease and enhancement in self-care ability and positive effects on biochemical parameters, such as BMI, FPG, and HbA1c. DCMP could effectively increase the frequency of weekly SMBG and the DM health literacy levels among Taiwanese DM patients. No significant changes in depressive symptoms. |
Lee, S.J., Korea, 2017 |
Rct |
1 h |
Wan, E.Y.F., Hong Kong, 2017 |
| clinical, behavioral, psychological, literacy |
51 |
74.5 (4.8) |
| 74.5 (4.8) |
Significant differences in DSK, DSE, DSMB, DHB, and HbA1c levels. |
Wan, E.Y.F., Hong Kong, 2017 |
Quasi-experimental |
Lee, M.-K., USA, 2017 |
-
Clinical: HbA1c level; fructosamine, weight, blood pressure, and LDL cholesterol were measured by Samsung Health Diary (SHD) telemonitoring device
| NR |
psychological |
1039 |
| 63.80 (10.61) |
68.54 (10.14) |
RAMP-DM was more effective in improving the physical component of HRQOL, patient enablement, and general health condition in patients with suboptimal HbA1c than those with optimal HbA1c. However, the hypothesis that the RAMP-DM can improve HRQOL cannot be fully supported by these research findings. |
|
Lee, M.-K., USA, 2017 |
Rct |
NR |
Siaw, M.Y.L., Malaysia, 2017 |
| clinical |
| 198 |
54.6 (9.7) |
56.4 (8.7) |
An increased SMBG frequency (twice a day) for the first 6 weeks with the telemonitoring device was associated with improved glycemic control (HbA1c and fructosamine blood levels) at 6 months. |
|
|
Siaw, M.Y.L., Malaysia, 2017 |
Rct |
* Vandenbosch, J., Belgium, 2018 |
| 20–30 min |
clinical, behavioral, psychological, literacy |
330 |
| 59.2 (8.2) |
| 60.1 (8.1) |
| At 6 months: reduction of mean HbA1c, higher in patients with uncontrolled glycemia at baseline. Improvements in PAID and DTSQ scores, reduction in physician workload, and an average cost savings were observed. |
|
Every 4 to 6 Weeks |
Y |
Y |
0 |
Kim, S.H., Korea, 2019 |
|
Vandenbosch, J., Belgium, 2018 |
Pre-post study |
Swavely, D. (2014) |
Y | NR |
clinical, behavioral, psychological, literacy |
366 |
U |
NA | 62.1 (11.99) |
62.5 (11.12) |
Positive effects of DSME programmes on self-reported self-management behaviours and almost all psychological and health outcomes regardless of HL level. Individual and group-based programs performed better than self-help groups. |
U |
N |
Y |
Rasoul, A.M., Iran, 2019 | Y |
Y |
Y |
Y |
| 0 |
|
Kim, S.H., Korea, 2019 |
|
Petkova, V.B. (2006) | Rct |
NR |
clinical, behavioral, psychological |
155 |
Y | NR |
Y |
NA |
N |
N | NR |
At 9 weeks, patients with high HL showed higher levels of patient activation than those with low HL in the control group, while the difference related to HL was no longer significant in intervention groups. At 9 weeks, patients who received the telephone-based, HL-sensitive diabetes management intervention had a significantly higher score for self-care behaviors. No significance on HbA1c levels. |
N |
Cheng, L. China, 2019 | Y |
Y |
N |
Y |
| 0 |
|
Rasoul, A.M., Iran, 2019 |
Rct |
90′ session 3 times a week |
psychological |
98 |
31.36 (5.29) |
McGowan, P., Canada, 2019 | 32.98 (4.42) |
Significant differences both in anthropometric variables/metabolic indicators (waist circumference, FBS, BMI) and quality of life score. |
|
Cheng, L. China, 2019 |
Rct |
Sims, G.J. (2019) |
Y |
Y |
| NA |
| N |
N |
N |
| Y |
| Y |
Y |
Y |
| 0 |
NR |
psychological |
242 |
McGowan, P. (2019) |
Y |
Y | 56.13 (10.72) |
53.9 (13.01) |
At one week, significant improvements on empowerment level, reduction in terms of emotional-distress, regimen-distress, and physician-related distress was observed. Empowerment, emotional-distress, and improvement in quality of life were found to be still significant at 3 months. |
NA |
N |
N |
N |
Y |
Y |
Y |
Y |
0 |
McGowan, P., Canada, 2019 |
Pre-post study |
30 min |
clinical, behavioral, psychological, literacy |
115 |
60.8 (9.3) |
NR |
At 12 months: reduction of HbA1c level, fatigue, and depression level; improvement of general health, activation, empowerment, self-efficacy, and increased communication with physician. |
Hernández-Jiménez, S., Mexico, 2019 |
Pre-post study |
sessions 30–60 min |
clinical |
1837 |
51.1 (10.3) |
NR |
At 4 months, positive effects on empowerment, HL, anxiety, depression, quality of life, HbA1c levels, BP, and LDL. Decreasing trends were also observed at 12 months. |
Sims Gould, J., Canada, 2019 |
Pre-post study |
NR |
behavioral, literacy |
17 |
NR |
NR |
The GMVs increased participants’ diabetes literacy and self-management skills |
White, R.O., 2021 |
Rct |
NR |
behavioral, literacy, clinical, psychological |
364 |
51 (36–60) |
50 (37–60) |
At 12 months: decreased risk of poor eating and better treatment satisfaction, self-efficacy, and HbA1c levels. |