Aim: Our aim was to study the feasibility and acceptability of our partly online psychoeducational group intervention HypoAware targeted at adults with insulin-treated diabetes and hypoglycaemia problems in an uncontrolled multi-centre pilot study.
Methods: We developed a 4-week, party online, group intervention, based on key elements of the evidence-based Blood Glucose Awareness Training (BGAT) and with input from diabetes healthcare professionals and people with diabetes. We recruited adults with Type 1 and insulin-treated Type 2 diabetes with impaired hypoglycaemia awareness, frequent hypoglycaemic episodes and/or fear of hypoglycaemia. Feasibility was assessed by means of self-report questionnaires. Pre-post outcomes included self-reported frequency of mild hypoglycaemia, fear of hypoglycaemia, confidence in diabetes self-care, subjective health status, diabetes-specific and general psychological distress and emotional well-being.
Results: Organization, recruitment, delivery of HypoAware, retention and compliance yielded no major problems, and both trainers and participants were very satisfied with the programme. The intervention materials required only minor changes. We obtained pre-post intervention measurements in 37 participants from eight hospitals with three drop-outs. Worries about hypoglycaemia, diabetes distress and confidence in self-care improved significantly (P < 0.05), although frequency of hypoglycaemia and hypoglycaemia awareness did not.
Conclusions: HypoAware is a new, feasible and acceptable intervention including online modules aimed to help adults with Type 1 and insulin-treated Type 2 diabetes reduce hypoglycaemia and related problems. A cluster-randomized controlled trial is planned to test effectiveness, combined with an economic evaluation.
© 2015 The Authors. Diabetic Medicine © 2015 Diabetes UK.