1. The NIHR Collaborations for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC) for Birmingham & Black Country is one of nine pilot CLAHRCs funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR). CLAHRCs were established in October 2008 with up to £10 million funding over five years to undertake high-quality applied health research focused on the needs of patients and to support the translation of research evidence into practice in the NHS.
2. The CLAHRC for Birmingham and the Black Country (BBC) covers all the Birmingham Primary Care Trusts (PCTs) and extends into the area covered by two of the four Black Country PCTs. University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust is the lead NHS organisation and the University of Birmingham is the academic partner.
3. The CLAHRC BBC Theme 8 is: Implementation of effective community care for diabetes and is concerned specifically with Type 2 diabetes, which currently affects 2.3 million people in England and Wales.
4. The DESMOND education course is mainly delivered in primary care in the UK, as part of the service offered by local primary care trusts. The programme has been designed to meet the standards outlined in national policy, for example, the Diabetes National Service Framework (NSF), and the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE).
5. The DESMOND programme currently being provided in England is made up of 6 hours of group sessions delivered in the community to a maximum of 10 people newly diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes.
6. The CLAHRC for Leicestershire, Northamptonshire and Rutland (LNR) is sharing the results of its randomised controlled trial of the DESMOND programme (run through The University Hospitals of Leicester) with the CLAHRC BBC.
7: Visit the CLAHRC BBC website at: www.clahrc-bbc.nihr.ac.uk