@article {Kokabbjgpopen17X101205, author = {Farina Kokab and Rachel Foskett-Tharby and Nick Hex and Paramjit Gill}, title = {A protocol for the development and piloting of quality measures to support the Healthier You: The NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme}, volume = {1}, number = {4}, elocation-id = {bjgpopen17X101205}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.3399/bjgpopen17X101205}, publisher = {Royal College of General Practitioners}, abstract = {Background The increasing prevalence of type 2 diabetes in the UK creates an additional, potentially preventable burden on health care and service providers. The Healthier You: NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme aims to reduce the incidence of type 2 diabetes through the identification of people at risk and the provision of intensive lifestyle change support. The provision of this care can be monitored through quality measurement at both the general practice and specialist service level.Aim To develop quality measures through piloting to assess the validity, credibility, acceptability, reliability, and feasibility of any proposed measures.Design \& setting The non-experimental mixed design piloting study consists of consensus testing and exploratory research with GPs, commissioners, and patients from Herefordshire, England.Method A mixed-method approach will be used to develop and validate measures for diabetes prevention care and evaluate their performance over a 6-month pilot period consisting of consensus testing using a modified RAND approach with GPs and commissioners; four focus groups with 8{\textendash}10 participants discussing experiences of non-diabetic hyperglycaemia (NDH), perceived ability to access care and prevent diabetes, and views on potential quality measures; and piloting final measures with at least five general practices for baseline and 6-month data.Results The findings will inform the implementation of the diabetes prevention quality measures on a national scale while addressing any issue with validity, credibility, feasibility, and cost-effectiveness.Conclusion Healthcare professionals and patients have the opportunity to evaluate the reliability, acceptability, and validity of measures.}, URL = {https://bjgpopen.org/content/1/4/bjgpopen17X101205}, eprint = {https://bjgpopen.org/content/1/4/bjgpopen17X101205.full.pdf}, journal = {BJGP Open} }