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Featured researches published by Marjolein M. Iversen.


Diabetes Care | 2009

History of Foot Ulcer Increases Mortality Among Individuals With Diabetes Ten-year follow-up of the Nord-Trøndelag Health Study, Norway

Marjolein M. Iversen; Grethe S. Tell; Trond Riise; Berit Rokne Hanestad; Truls Østbye; Marit Graue; Kristian Midthjell

OBJECTIVE To compare mortality rates for individuals with diabetes with and without a history of foot ulcer (HFU) and with that for the nondiabetic population. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS This population-based study included 155 diabetic individuals with an HFU, 1,339 diabetic individuals without an HFU, and 63,632 nondiabetic individuals who were all followed for 10 years with mortality as the end point. RESULTS During the follow-up period, a total of 49.0% of diabetic individuals with an HFU died, compared with 35.2% of diabetic individuals without an HFU and 10.5% of those without diabetes. In Cox regression analyses adjusted for age, sex, education, current smoking, and waist circumference, having an HFU was associated with more than a twofold (2.29 [95% CI 1.82–2.88]) hazard risk for mortality compared with that of the nondiabetic group. In corresponding analyses comparing diabetic individuals with and without an HFU, an HFU was associated with 47% increased mortality (1.47 [1.14–1.89]). Significant covariates were older age, male sex, and current smoking. After inclusion of A1C, insulin use, microalbuminuria, cardiovascular disease, and depression scores in the model, each was significantly related to life expectancy. CONCLUSIONS AN HFU increased mortality risk among community-dwelling adults and elderly individuals with diabetes. The excess risk persisted after adjustment for comorbidity and depression scores, indicating that close clinical monitoring might be warranted among individuals with an HFU, who may be particularly vulnerable to adverse outcomes.


Diabetes Care | 2009

A History of Foot ulcer increases Mortality among Persons with Diabetes. 10-year Follow-up of the Nord-Trøndelag Health Study, Norway

Marjolein M. Iversen; Grethe S. Tell; Trond Riise; Berit Rokne Hanestad; Truls Østbye; Marit Graue; Kristian Midthjell

OBJECTIVE To compare mortality rates for individuals with diabetes with and without a history of foot ulcer (HFU) and with that for the nondiabetic population. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS This population-based study included 155 diabetic individuals with an HFU, 1,339 diabetic individuals without an HFU, and 63,632 nondiabetic individuals who were all followed for 10 years with mortality as the end point. RESULTS During the follow-up period, a total of 49.0% of diabetic individuals with an HFU died, compared with 35.2% of diabetic individuals without an HFU and 10.5% of those without diabetes. In Cox regression analyses adjusted for age, sex, education, current smoking, and waist circumference, having an HFU was associated with more than a twofold (2.29 [95% CI 1.82–2.88]) hazard risk for mortality compared with that of the nondiabetic group. In corresponding analyses comparing diabetic individuals with and without an HFU, an HFU was associated with 47% increased mortality (1.47 [1.14–1.89]). Significant covariates were older age, male sex, and current smoking. After inclusion of A1C, insulin use, microalbuminuria, cardiovascular disease, and depression scores in the model, each was significantly related to life expectancy. CONCLUSIONS AN HFU increased mortality risk among community-dwelling adults and elderly individuals with diabetes. The excess risk persisted after adjustment for comorbidity and depression scores, indicating that close clinical monitoring might be warranted among individuals with an HFU, who may be particularly vulnerable to adverse outcomes.


BMC Endocrine Disorders | 2009

The association between history of diabetic foot ulcer, perceived health and psychological distress: the Nord-Trøndelag Health Study

Marjolein M. Iversen; Kristian Midthjell; Grethe S. Tell; Torbjørn Moum; Truls Østbye; Monica Wammen Nortvedt; Sverre Uhlving; Berit Rokne Hanestad

BackgroundWhile the adverse impact of a history of a foot ulcer on physical health among persons with diabetes is well known, little is known about the association between foot ulcer, perceived health and psychological distress. Results from various studies are difficult to compare as different study designs, samples and/or different questionnaires have been used. The aim of this study was to compare levels of anxiety and depression, psychological well-being and perceived health between persons with diabetes, with or without a history of foot ulcer, and persons without diabetes in a large study of community-dwelling individuals.MethodsThis study included 65,126 persons, of whom 63,632 did not have diabetes, 1,339 had diabetes without a history of foot ulcer and 155 had diabetes and a history of foot ulcer. Levels of anxiety and depression were assessed by the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). Psychological well-being was measured on a four-item scale, and perceived health was measured with a one-item question. We investigated whether levels of anxiety, depression, psychological well-being and perceived health were different in the three study groups using multiple regression models controlling for demographic factors, body mass index, smoking and cardiovascular conditions. Separate multivariate analyses comparing the two diabetes samples were additionally adjusted for diabetes-specific variables.ResultsA history of foot ulcer was significantly associated with more depressive symptoms, poorer psychological well-being and poorer perceived health compared to participants without diabetes. In multivariate analyses, perceived health and psychological well-being were significantly poorer among those with a history of foot ulcer compared to those without diabetes. Among persons with diabetes, perceived health was significantly worse among those with a history of foot ulcer. After multivariate adjustment, levels of anxiety and depression and psychological well-being did not differ between the two diabetes groups.ConclusionPerceived health and psychological well-being were significantly poorer among participants with diabetes and a history of foot ulcer compared to those without diabetes. Among people with diabetes, a history of foot ulcer had significant negative impact on perceived health but did not independently contribute to psychological distress.


Research in Nursing & Health | 2008

Regularity of preventive foot care in persons with diabetes: results from the Nord-Trøndelag Health Study.

Marjolein M. Iversen; Truls Østbye; Elizabeth C. Clipp; Kristian Midthjell; Sverre Uhlving; Marit Graue; Berit Rokne Hanestad

The purpose of the present study was to examine the regularity of preventive care for persons with diabetes in the Nord-Trøndelag Health Study to identify associated demographic, lifestyle, and disease-related factors. Among 1,972 persons with diabetes, 1,459 (74%) answered questions related to preventive foot care. The final sample included 1,312 persons with known diabetes, but without a self-reported history of foot ulcer. Almost 85% reported receiving regular clinical diabetes examinations, 31.7% reported regular foot inspection by health care personnel, and 66.3% reported foot self-inspection. Only 58.8% reported regular clinical diabetes examination combined with foot inspection. Males, patients not using insulin, and those with shorter diabetes duration or macrovascular complications were more likely to report less regular preventive care.


JMIR Research Protocols | 2016

Telemedicine Versus Standard Follow-Up Care for Diabetes-Related Foot Ulcers: Protocol for a Cluster Randomized Controlled Noninferiority Trial (DiaFOTo)

Marjolein M. Iversen; Birgitte Espehaug; Marie Fjelde Hausken; Marit Graue; Truls Østbye; Svein Skeie; John G. Cooper; Grethe S. Tell; Bodo Erhardt Günther; Håvard Dale; Hilde Smith-Strøm; Marit Kirkevold; Berit Rokne

Background This paper presents the protocol for an ongoing study to evaluate a telemedicine follow-up intervention for patients with diabetes-related foot ulcers. Diabetes-related foot ulcers represent challenges for patients and the health services. The large increase in the prevalence of diabetes, combined with the aging population, means that the absolute number of patients with diabetes-related foot ulcers is likely to continue to increase. Health care services therefore need to provide close clinical follow-up care for people with diabetes both in primary and specialist care. Information and communication technologies may enable more integrated treatment and care pathways across organizational boundaries. However, we lack knowledge about the effect of telemedicine follow-up and how such services can be optimally organized. Objective To present the design and methods of a study evaluating a telemedicine follow-up intervention for patients with diabetes-related foot ulcers. Methods The study is designed as a cluster randomized controlled trial (noninferiority trial) involving municipalities or municipality districts (clusters) belonging to one clinical site in Western Norway. The study includes patients with type 1 and type 2 diabetes presenting with a new foot ulcer at the initial visit to the clinic. Patients in the intervention group receive telemedicine follow-up care in the community. The key ingredient in the intervention is the close integration between health care levels. The intervention is facilitated by the use of an interactive wound platform consisting of a Web-based ulcer record combined with a mobile phone, enabling counseling and communication between nurses in the community and specialist health care. Patients in the control group receive standard hospital outpatient care. The primary endpoint in the trial is healing time; secondary outcomes include amputation and death, patient-reported outcome measures, and follow-up data on the recurrence of foot ulcers. In addition, qualitative substudies are being performed to provide a more comprehensive evaluation of the ongoing processes during the trial with the patients in the intervention and control groups and those health care professionals either working in primary care or in specialist care delivering the intervention. Results The project has been funded. The inclusion of patients started in September 2012. Because recruitment goals were not met in the initial period, two more clinical sites have been included to meet sample size requirements. Patient recruitment will continue until June 2016. Data collection in the qualitative substudies has been completed. Conclusions This telemedicine trial operates in a novel setting and targets patients with diabetes-related foot ulcers during a 12-month follow-up period. The trial addresses whether integrated care using telemedicine between primary and specialist health care can be an equivalent alternative to standard outpatient care. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01710774; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01710774 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6im6KfFov).


Journal of diabetes science and technology | 2017

Shared Electronic Health Record Systems: Key Legal and Security Challenges

Ellen K. Christiansen; Eva Skipenes; Marie Fjelde Hausken; Svein Skeie; Truls Østbye; Marjolein M. Iversen

Use of shared electronic health records opens a whole range of new possibilities for flexible and fruitful cooperation among health personnel in different health institutions, to the benefit of the patients. There are, however, unsolved legal and security challenges. The overall aim of this article is to highlight legal and security challenges that should be considered before using shared electronic cooperation platforms and health record systems to avoid legal and security “surprises” subsequent to the implementation. Practical lessons learned from the use of a web-based ulcer record system involving patients, community nurses, GPs, and hospital nurses and doctors in specialist health care are used to illustrate challenges we faced. Discussion of possible legal and security challenges is critical for successful implementation of shared electronic collaboration systems. Key challenges include (1) allocation of responsibility, (2) documentation routines, (3) and integrated or federated access control. We discuss and suggest how challenges of legal and security aspects can be handled. This discussion may be useful for both current and future users, as well as policy makers.


Nordic journal of nursing research | 2008

Oversettelse og kulturell tilpasning av diabetes spesifikt livskvalitets skjema ADDQol for bruk i Norge

Liv Berit Bruvik Thulin; Marjolein M. Iversen; Berit Rokne Hanestad

The ADDQoL (Audit of Diabetes Dependence Quality of Life) is a questionnaire well designed to assess to what extent diabetes may affect different life domains. The aim of the project was to translate and adapt the ADDQoL into Norwegian, and WHOQoL translation guidelines were followed. A project group was responsible for the following procedure. Two professional translators translated the original English version of ADDQoL into Norwegian. An expert panel with expertise in diabetes and quality of life research examined the translations and discussed difficult wordings with the translators and the project group. A focus group consisting of people with diabetes went through the revised version. The expert panel considered the comments from the focus group and made some minor revisions. Then two new professional translators made a back translation. The project group compared the original English version with the back-translated version and approved the final version in collaboration with the author of the ADDQoL. Going through this process in a proper way is demanding. However, a questionnaire which is not properly translated and cultural adapted will be a threat for validity and reliability. The translation and cultural adaptation phase should be followed by empirical testing of validity and reliability.


Diabetes Care | 2018

The Effect of Telemedicine Follow-up Care on Diabetes-Related Foot Ulcers: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Noninferiority Trial

Hilde Smith-Strøm; Jannicke Igland; Truls Østbye; Grethe S. Tell; Marie Fjelde Hausken; Marit Graue; Svein Skeie; John G. Cooper; Marjolein M. Iversen

OBJECTIVE To evaluate whether telemedicine (TM) follow-up of patients with diabetes-related foot ulcers (DFUs) in primary health care in collaboration with specialist health care was noninferior to standard outpatient care (SOC) for ulcer healing time. Further, we sought to evaluate whether the proportion of amputations, deaths, number of consultations per month, and patient satisfaction differed between the two groups. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Patients with DFUs were recruited from three clinical sites in western Norway (2012–2016). The cluster-randomized controlled noninferiority trial included 182 adults (94/88 in the TM/SOC groups) in 42 municipalities/districts. The intervention group received TM follow-up care in the community; the control group received SOC. The primary end point was healing time. Secondary end points were amputation, death, number of consultations per month, and patient satisfaction. RESULTS Using mixed-effects regression analysis, we found that TM was noninferior to SOC regarding healing time (mean difference –0.43 months, 95% CI −1.50, 0.65). When competing risk from death and amputation were taken into account, there was no significant difference in healing time between the groups (subhazard ratio 1.16, 95% CI 0.85, 1.59). The TM group had a significantly lower proportion of amputations (mean difference –8.3%, 95% CI –16.3%, –0.5%), and there were no significant differences in the proportion of deaths, number of consultations, or patient satisfaction between groups, although the direction of the effect estimates for these clinical outcomes favored the TM group. CONCLUSIONS The results suggest that use of TM technology can be a relevant alternative and supplement to usual care, at least for patients with more superficial ulcers.


Scandinavian Journal of Public Health | 2008

History of and factors associated with diabetic foot ulcers in Norway: The Nord-Trøndelag Health Study

Marjolein M. Iversen; Kristian Midthjell; Truls Østbye; Grethe S. Tell; Elizabeth C. Clipp; Richard Sloane; Monica Wammen Nortvedt; Sverre Uhlving; Berit Rokne Hanestad


Archive | 2008

History of and factors associated with diabetic foot ulcers in Norway

Marjolein M. Iversen; Kristian Midthjell; Truls Østbye; Grethe S. Tell; Elizabeth C. Clipp; Richard Sloane; Monica Wammen Nortvedt; Sverre Uhlving; Berit Rokne Hanestad

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Truls Østbye

National University of Singapore

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Marit Graue

Bergen University College

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Kristian Midthjell

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Sverre Uhlving

Stavanger University Hospital

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Marie Fjelde Hausken

Stavanger University Hospital

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Svein Skeie

Stavanger University Hospital

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Trond Riise

Haukeland University Hospital

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