Ong Woon May, Chua Siew Siang, Ng Chirk Jenn
Department of Pharmacy, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
University of Malaya Primary Care Research Group (UMPCRG), Department of Primary Care Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Patient Prefer Adherence. 2014 Feb 15;8:237-46. doi: 10.2147/PPA.S57567. eCollection 2014.
Self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) helps to improve glycemic control and empowerment of people with diabetes. It is particularly useful for people with diabetes who are using insulin as it facilitates insulin titration and detection of hypoglycemia. Despite this, the uptake of SMBG remains low in many countries, including Malaysia.
This study aimed to explore the barriers and facilitators to SMBG, in people with type 2 diabetes using insulin.
Qualitative methodology was employed to explore participants' experience with SMBG. Semistructured, individual in-depth interviews were conducted on people with type 2 diabetes using insulin who had practiced SMBG, in the primary care clinic of a teaching hospital in Malaysia. Participants were purposively sampled from different age groups, ethnicity, education level, and level of glycemic control (as reflected by the glycated hemoglobin [HbA1c]), to achieve maximum variation in sampling. All interviews were conducted using a topic guide and were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, checked, and analyzed using a thematic approach.
A total of 15 participants were interviewed, and thematic saturation was reached. The factors that influenced SMBG were mainly related to cost, participants' emotion, and the SMBG process. The barriers identified included: frustration related to high blood glucose reading; perception that SMBG was only for insulin titration; stigma; fear of needles and pain; cost of test strips and needles; inconvenience; unconducive workplace; and lack of motivation, knowledge, and self-efficacy. The facilitators were: experiencing hypoglycemic symptoms; desire to see the effects of dietary changes; desire to please the physician; and family motivation.
Participants' perceptions of the purpose of SMBG, the emotions associated with SMBG, and the complexity, pain, and cost related to SMBG as well as personal and family motivation are the key factors that health care providers must consider when advising people with diabetes on SMBG.
血糖自我监测(SMBG)有助于改善糖尿病患者的血糖控制并增强其自主管理能力。对于使用胰岛素的糖尿病患者而言,它尤为有用,因为它有助于胰岛素剂量调整以及低血糖的检测。尽管如此,包括马来西亚在内的许多国家,SMBG的采用率仍然很低。
本研究旨在探讨2型糖尿病胰岛素使用者进行SMBG的障碍和促进因素。
采用定性研究方法来探究参与者进行SMBG的经历。在马来西亚一家教学医院的初级保健诊所,对已进行SMBG的2型糖尿病胰岛素使用者进行了半结构化的个人深度访谈。参与者按目的抽样,来自不同年龄组、种族、教育水平以及血糖控制水平(以糖化血红蛋白[HbA1c]反映),以实现抽样的最大多样性。所有访谈均使用主题指南进行,并进行录音、逐字转录、核对,然后采用主题分析法进行分析。
共访谈了15名参与者,达到了主题饱和。影响SMBG的因素主要与成本、参与者的情绪以及SMBG过程有关。确定的障碍包括:对高血糖读数感到沮丧;认为SMBG仅用于胰岛素剂量调整;耻辱感;害怕针头和疼痛;试纸条和针头的成本;不便;工作场所不利;以及缺乏动力、知识和自我效能感。促进因素包括:出现低血糖症状;希望看到饮食改变的效果;希望取悦医生;以及家庭的激励。
参与者对SMBG目的的认知、与SMBG相关的情绪、SMBG的复杂性、疼痛和成本以及个人和家庭的动力,是医疗保健提供者在就SMBG向糖尿病患者提供建议时必须考虑的关键因素。