Impact of Medicaid Health Home on Patients With Diabetes in New York City
Part of paid clinical trials in New York, New York.
- Sponsor
- Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
- Study ID
- NCT02713321
- Status
- Completed
Conditions
Eligibility Criteria
- Sex
- ALL
- Age
- 18 Years - N/A
- Healthy Volunteers
- Not accepted
Study Details
Type 2 diabetes is common in the United States; about 1 in 10 people have the disease. Diabetes can cause devastating health events, such as hospitalizations, kidney failure, blindness, amputation, heart attack, stroke, painful nerve damage (neuropathy), and death. There are many barriers for patients with diabetes that get in the way of controlling risk factors, following recommendations, and getting the care they need from the health system to help prevent these complications; this is especially true for those with other health problems too. Those living in poverty and racial/ethnic minorities are more likely to have complications from diabetes, and less likely to get recommended care from health systems. In order to improve care and outcomes for people with complex medical problems, several states have started the Medicaid Health Home (HH) program, including New York State (NYS) in 2012. This program is for people with two or more chronic health conditions, such as diabetes and heart disease, people with HIV, and people with a serious mental health condition. HHs are meant to manage and coordinate care, by helping health care providers, social service agencies, community-based organizations, and health insurance plans work together. Similar programs have been shown, on a smaller scale, to improve some results for patients with diabetes, such as lab tests indicating level of diabetes control. Studies have not yet looked at how a large program like HHs impacts the way healthcare is delivered and impacts the health events that matter most to patients with diabetes. Also, few studies include stakeholders on the research team, even though they stand to benefit the most from such programs, and have the experience needed as patients, clinicians, advocates, and administrators to guide efforts. The investigators have gathered a research team that includes scientific investigators along with a diverse group of partners, including patients, clinicians, and program administrators. The investigators plan to use two data sources that show what happens to individual patients over time: 1) NYS Medicaid insurance data 2) the New York City-Clinical Data Research Network (NYC-CDRN). The NYC-CDRN has identified a group of patients with diabetes from 7 large health systems; it has also developed a system for putting together the same set of information for each patient, and removing any identifying information. The investigator will look at patients who have diabetes and are part of a HH and study what happened to them over time. The investigator will also look at a comparison group of patients who are very similar to the HH patients, but they did not join a HH, and follow them over time. The investigator will then compare these two groups to each other. The investigator will look at the quality of healthcare they received and their health outcomes. The investigator will focus on health outcomes that are meaningful to patients. This study can provide important knowledge about the effects of the HH program on patients with diabetes.
Key Dates
- Start date
- Jan 24, 2017
- Status verified
- Jun 2025
- Primary completion
- Aug 31, 2021
- Completion
- Aug 31, 2021
Study Design
- Enrollment
- 96,759 participants (actual)
Arms
- Arm: Health Home patientsThe cohort is made up of patients with type 2 diabetes, insured by Medicaid, and eligible for participation in a Medicaid Health Home (either due to HIV infection, serious mental illness, substance abuse, or multiple chronic conditions). One group will include patients who participate in the Health Home program.
- Arm: non-Health Home patientsThe second group will include patients who do not participate in the Health Home program, but have type 2 diabetes, are insured by Medicaid, and meet eligibility requirements for the Health Homes.
Primary Outcome Measure
Number of Enrollees With Diabetes-related Preventable Hospitalizations [ Time Frame: Baseline and 12 months ]
Locations (1)
| Facility | City | State | ZIP | Site coordinators |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai | New York | New York | 10029 | - |
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