Ambulance 'Hypos Can Strike Twice' Study

Last updated: September 29, 2021
Sponsor: University of Lincoln
Overall Status: Completed

Phase

N/A

Condition

Diabetic Neuropathy

Diabetic Gastroparesis

Diabetic Macular Edema

Treatment

N/A

Clinical Study ID

NCT04243200
191202
  • Ages > 18
  • All Genders

Study Summary

This study will assess the effectiveness the "Hypos can strike twice" intervention on people with diabetes experiencing hypoglycaemia (or "hypo", meaning low blood sugar). The intervention should help prevent recurrence of "hypos", improve patients' future health, reduce calls to ambulance services and thus reduce NHS pressures and costs.

Hypoglycaemia affects increasing numbers of people with diabetes. It is a side effect of treatment with insulin or certain tablets, where blood glucose (sugar) falls causing the brain to malfunction. In mild cases this can lead to sweating, drowsiness and confusion; in more severe cases, coma can occur needing medical assistance for recovery, and if prolonged can be fatal. It results in 1% of calls to ambulance services.

The "Hypos can strike twice" intervention involves ambulance staff providing treatment to patients experiencing hypos and advising them to access follow-up care by their GP/specialist diabetes team. This is backed up by giving patients a "Hypos can strike twice" information booklet which they can read when they recover.

Universities of Lincoln and Leicester are working with East Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Trust and patient groups on this study. The "Hypos can strike twice" intervention has now been implemented by ambulance services in Leicester, Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire and Lincolnshire from October 2018-May 2019.

The investigators will analyse data from the ambulance services before, during and after the introduction of the 'Hypos can strike twice' intervention to evaluate the effect of the intervention on repeat ambulance calls and attendances for hypoglycaemia and the costs and consequences of implementing it. The investigators will also interview/survey ambulance staff who provided the intervention and patients who received it, to understand how and why it works (or does not) and how, if it works, it could be scaled up over a larger geographical area. The duration of this study is 1 year.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion criteria: Patients: Adults aged 18 years+ with diabetes experiencing hypoglycaemia needing anambulance service response. Hypoglycaemia for this study was identified as a 'clinicalimpression' of 'hypoglycaemia' or 'diabetic problem'. Hypoglycaemia may also be identifiedaccording to ambulance guidelines1 as any blood glucose less than 4mmol/L. Clinicians: Ambulance staff providing treatment and advice to people who have had ahypoglycaemic attack.

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria: Patients: Children under the age of 18 years. Clinicians: Ambulance staff providing treatment and advice for incidents other thanhypoglycaemia.

Study Design

Total Participants: 5015
Study Start date:
September 14, 2020
Estimated Completion Date:
April 30, 2021

Study Description

Research question

What is the effect on repeat ambulance calls and attendances for hypoglycaemia and what are the costs and consequences of implementing the 'Hypo's can strike twice' intervention to patients with diabetes and hypoglycaemia attended by East Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Trust in the East Midlands region of the UK?

Background

Severe hypoglycaemia (defined as cognitive impairment severe enough to require external assistance for recovery) frequently requires an ambulance resulting in Emergency Department attendance or hospital admission. Severe hypoglycaemia constitutes around 1% of 1.7 million emergency ambulance calls in England and Scotland resulting in 100 thousand paramedic attendances and estimated costs in England of £13.6 million annually. Hypoglycaemia is associated with adverse consequences including higher mortality, morbidity and health service costs due to hospital attendance/admission. It is also frightening for both patients and relatives and impairs quality of life and productivity, leading to poor long term control.

Aims and objectives

Aim: To evaluate the effect of implementing the 'Hypo's can strike twice' intervention to patients with diabetes and hypoglycaemia attended by East Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Trust in the East Midlands region. "Hypos can strike twice" is a complex intervention involving ambulance staff providing treatment and advice to people who have had a hypoglycaemic attack to access follow-up care by the GP or specialist diabetes team as detailed in national ambulance (JRCALC) clinical guidelines supported by the provision of a "Hypos can strike twice" booklet which the patient can read when they are fully recovered from the cognitive and other effects of the hypoglycaemic episode.

Objectives

To investigate the effect of implementing the 'Hypo's can strike twice' on:

  1. Repeat ambulance calls and attendances for hypoglycaemia

  2. Recorded referrals to an appropriate healthcare professional (e.g. GP, nurse).

  3. Completed care bundle for hypoglycaemia (proportion of patients with all of blood glucose recorded before treatment, blood glucose recorded after treatment and treatment given for hypoglycaemia.

  4. Costs of implementation 'Hypo's can strike twice' intervention vs costs of health service resource use.

  5. To conduct a process evaluation to explore how 'Hypo's can strike twice' exerts its effects and can be scaled up if effective by understanding implementation, mechanisms of impact, and contextual factors using interviews and surveys

Methods

Non-randomised stepped wedge design with mixed-methods process evaluation.

Connect with a study center

  • Community and Health Research Unit, University of Lincoln

    Lincoln, Lincolnshire LN5 7AY
    United Kingdom

    Site Not Available

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