Short Message Service as a Tool for Health Education in Families of Children with Type 1 Diabetes in Pakistan: A Randomized Control Trial

Authors

  • Asbah Rahman Department of Paediatrics, Pak Emirates Military Hospital/National University of Medical Sciences (NUMS), Rawalpindi Pakistan
  • Asma Razzaq Department of Paediatrics, Pak Emirates Military Hospital/National University of Medical Sciences (NUMS), Rawalpindi Pakistan
  • Mohammad Sheharyar Khan Department of ENT, Rawalpindi Medical University, Rawalpindi Pakistan
  • Noor un Nisa Department of Paediatrics, Pak Emirates Military Hospital/National University of Medical Sciences (NUMS), Rawalpindi Pakistan
  • Sadaf Nawaz Department of Paediatrics, Combined Military Hospital Gujranwala/National University of Medical Sciences (NUMS) Pakistan
  • Saleem Akhtar Department of Internal medicine, Rai medical college, Sargodha Pakistan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51253/pafmj.v74i2.10215

Keywords:

blood sugar levels (BSLs), education, HbA1c, SMS, type1 diabetes, telemedicine

Abstract

Objective: To determine the efficacy of short message service (SMS) for educating families of children with Type 1 Diabetes
(T1D).
Study Design: Single-masked randomized control trial (IRCT: 54713).

Place and Duration of Study: Tertiary care hospitals of Rawalpindi and Islamabad Pakistan, from Mar to Jul 2021.

Methodology: Twenty-nine T1D patients aged 1 to 18 years were randomly allotted to two groups: 15 to intervention or
Group-A (receiving 5 SMS per week) and 14 to Control or Group-B (receiving disease education during hospital visits).
Patients were followed up and their blood sugar levels (BSLs), HbA1c levels, journal maintenance, number of ER visits,
number of Self-Monitored Blood Glucose (SMBG) levels, and hypoglycemic episodes compared at baseline and after
intervention.

Results: HbA1c had a mean decrease of 2.13±1.89% in Group-A and a mean increase of 0.18±0.84% in Group-B (p-value
<0.001). Similarly, the decrease in BSLs post-intervention was significantly greater in Group-A (p-value=0.001). Trends in
secondary outcomes: journal maintenance, number of self-monitoring blood glucose levels, admissions in ER, and hypoglycemic episodes in the past three months showed improving trends in both groups. However, the p-value was significant postintervention only for hypoglycemia incidence (p-value=0.021) and diary maintenance (p-value=0.005).

Conclusion: SMS is an efficient tool for delivering education to T1D patients that significantly improves metabolic control. In
light of these results, current routine practice is not sufficient to achieve therapeutic goals

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Published

29-04-2024

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Original Articles

How to Cite

1.
Rahman A, Razzaq A, Khan MS, Nisa N un, Nawaz S, Akhtar S. Short Message Service as a Tool for Health Education in Families of Children with Type 1 Diabetes in Pakistan: A Randomized Control Trial. Pak Armed Forces Med J [Internet]. 2024 Apr. 29 [cited 2024 Nov. 24];74(2):506-11. Available from: https://pafmj.org/PAFMJ/article/view/10215