Browsing by Subject "young adult"
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Item Embargo Feasibility of Kanasina Gulabi, a Pilot Peer Support Intervention for Young Adults with Type 2 Diabetes in Mysore District, South India(2024) Gopisetty, Nikhita RaniBackground: The global rise in early-onset type 2 diabetes (T2D) is impacting the lives of millions of young individuals around the world. To address the knowledge gap and emotional burden in young adults with T2D, the research team designed a four-week education and goal-based peer support intervention, Kanasina Gulabi (Kannada: My Dream Rose), implemented in Mysore, India between June and July 2023. Methods: The Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework was used to assess feasibility. Peer navigators (n=3, mean age: 33 years) were recruited from the community and trained to deliver the intervention. Twenty-eight adults ≤ 40 years of age with T2D were recruited and quasi-randomly allocated to the intervention group (n=14, mean age: 33 years) or the control group (n=14, mean age: 33 years). Hemoglobin A1c, T2D knowledge, diabetes distress, diabetes-related stigma, depression severity, and optimism were assessed at baseline, immediately after the intervention, and at the 2-month follow-up. Attendance, fidelity, and acceptability were also assessed. Results: Intervention participants expressed high satisfaction with Kanasina Gulabi and gratitude for the guided knowledge and mentorship from their peer navigators. Participants displayed excellent attendance and adherence, with an average of 5 hours of Kanasina Gulabi exposure over 4 weeks. Peer navigators delivered the intervention with 100% fidelity. Results immediately following the intervention showed reductions in diabetes distress (Intervention: 30.9%, Control: 6.5%), diabetes-related stigma (Intervention: 25.3%, Control: 14.5%), and depression severity (Intervention: 58.3%, Control: 38.5%). Both groups presented an increase in T2D knowledge (Intervention: 19.7%, Control: 25.2%). Conclusion: Implementing Kanasina Gulabi in Mysore is feasible and acceptable, with intervention participants showing more positive changes on multiple psychosocial outcomes compared to the control group. Results support a full trial to evaluate its effectiveness and sustainability in young adults with T2D.
Item Open Access Redesigning Care of Hospitalized Young Adults With Chronic Childhood-Onset Disease.(Cureus, 2022-08) Feeney, Colby D; Platt, Alyssa; Rhodes, Jesse; Marcantonio, Yasmin; Patel-Nguyen, Sonya; White, Tyler; Wilson, Jonathan A; Pendergast, Jane; Ming, David YBackground Young adults with chronic childhood-onset disease (CCOD) are routinely admitted to internal medicine hospitalist services, yet most lack transition preparation to adult care. Providers and patients feel the strain of admissions to adult services in part due to their medical and social complexity. Methods We performed a descriptive study of a care redesign project for young adults with CCOD hospitalized at a large, tertiary care academic hospital. We describe the process of implementation of the Med-Peds (MP) service line and characterize patients cared for by the service. We measured and analyzed patient demographics, process implementation, healthcare screening, and healthcare utilization data. Results During the 16 months of the study period, 254 patients were cared for by the MP service line, accounting for 385 hospitalizations. The most common CCODs were sickle cell disease (22.4%) and type 1 diabetes (14.6%). The majority (76%) of patients completed transition readiness assessment, and 38.6% completed social determinant of health (SDH) screening during their admission. Patients had high prevalence of SDH with 66.7% having an unmet social need. The average length of stay was 6.6 days and the average 30-day readmission rate was 20.0%. Conclusions There is opportunity to redesign the inpatient care of young adult patients with CCOD. The MP service line is a care model that can be integrated into existing hospital medicine teams with MP physicians. Hospitals should consider redesigning care for young adults with CCOD to meet the transitional and social needs unique to this patient population.Item Open Access Retaining Adolescent and Young Adult Participants in Research During a Pandemic: Best Practices From Two Large-Scale Developmental Neuroimaging Studies (NCANDA and ABCD).(Frontiers in behavioral neuroscience, 2020-01) Nooner, Kate B; Chung, Tammy; Feldstein Ewing, Sarah W; Brumback, Ty; Arwood, Zjanya; Tapert, Susan F; Brown, Sandra A; Cottler, LindaThe novel coronavirus pandemic that emerged in late 2019 (COVID-19) has created challenges not previously experienced in human research. This paper discusses two large-scale NIH-funded multi-site longitudinal studies of adolescents and young adults - the National Consortium on Alcohol and Neurodevelopment in Adolescence (NCANDA) and the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study - and valuable approaches to learn about adaptive processes for conducting developmentally sensitive research with neuroimaging and neurocognitive testing across consortia during a global pandemic. We focus on challenges experienced during the pandemic and modifications that may guide other projects, such as implementing adapted protocols that protect the safety of participants and research staff, and addressing assessment challenges through the use of strategies such as remote and mobile assessments. Given the pandemic's disproportionate impacts on participants typically underrepresented in research, we describe efforts to retain these individuals. The pandemic provides an opportunity to develop adaptive processes that can facilitate future studies' ability to mobilize effectively and rapidly.