A first-of-its-kind study from the University of Roehampton has found that the use of telephone clinics improved adherence to a gluten-free diet in adults with celiac disease while at the same time relieved pressure on NHS services, providing vital data for how patients can be consulted during and post-pandemic.
The research involved 125 patients with celiac disease in the U.K., where the patients who reported difficultly adhering to a gluten-free diet were offered a personalized telephone consultation by Humayun Muhammad, gastroenterologist and senior research fellow at the University of Roehampton. Between February 2018 and February 2019, the research found that the telephone clinic improved patients’ ability to adhere to the gluten-free diet for up to six months. As such, this service has proven to be a highly effective way to assist those living with celiac disease in the long term.
In the study, patients’ level of adherence to a gluten-free diet was based on a scoring framework after completing questionnaires at three, six, nine and 12 months following the telephone consultation. Patients involved in the study were split into two groups: One group included those deemed to be adhering to a gluten-free diet before the clinics (the control group), and the second group comprised those who were not (the intervention group). The findings concluded that 63% of participants in the intervention group showed better adherence to the diet after three months, which remained at 60% after six months (Graph A). Additionally, only 13% and 16% of this group reported consuming gluten over the previous four weeks both three and six months post telephone clinic respectively, compared with 47% before (Graph B).
Key conclusions suggest that a telephone clinic format should be offered to patients now and beyond the current COVID-19 pandemic, as it reduces patient burden in attending outpatient or GP appointments and is time-, space- and cost-effective for the NHS. Indeed, as annual follow-ups are recommended by experts and important for patients to continue to follow their gluten-free diet, particularly for those new to it, the resource savings have the potential to be substantial for GP practices. Importantly, the study also provides a framework for further research globally into other ways telephone clinics can be used for treatment and advice for patients as NHS and health services come under increasing pressure due to the ongoing pandemic.
Celiac disease affects approximately one in 100 people in the U.K., meaning there are hundreds of thousands of British people living with the disease, which can only be treated by removing all gluten from their diet, requiring substantial changes to lifestyle.
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