Telehealth News

Year-Long Study Validates Telehealth Use in Diabetes Prevention Efforts

Supporters of digital Diabetes Prevention Programs say the PREDICTS trial proves that telehealth and mHealth tools can improve clinical outcomes for people at risk of developing the chronic disease.

Telehealth strategies

Source: ThinkStock

By Eric Wicklund

- A year-long study conducted by the University of Nebraska and Wake Forest University has found that a telehealth platform can help reduce the risk of diabetes in people with a high likelihood of developing the chronic disease.

Participants in the Preventing Diabetes with Digital Health and Coaching for Translation and Scalability (PREDICTS) trial “achieved a statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvement” in health and wellness, officials said in a press release. The trial centered on a digital Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) created by San Francisco-based Omada Health.

"The results clearly demonstrate the clinical effectiveness of the Omada program, and compare quite favorably to other studies of digital approaches to diabetes prevention,” Jeffrey Katula, PhD, an associate professor of health and exercise science at Wake Forest and the study’s co-principal investigator, said in the press release. “Our results should certainly inform policy decisions regarding the rapidly changing world of digital preventive health at a time when remote delivery of services is essential."

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