Centre for Exercise, Nutrition & Health Sciences, School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol, 8 Priory Road, Bristol, BS8 1TZ, UK.
Department of Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2018 Jan 31;18(1):204. doi: 10.1186/s12889-018-5114-5.
Diagnosis with Type 2 Diabetes is an opportunity for individuals to change their physical activity and dietary behaviours. Diabetes treatment guidelines recommend theory-based, patient-centred care and advocate the provision of support for patient motivation but the motivational experiences of people newly diagnosed with diabetes have not been well studied. Framed in self-determination theory, this study aimed to qualitatively explore how this patient group articulate and experience different types of motivation when attempting lifestyle change.
A secondary analysis of semi-structured interview data collected with 30 (n female = 18, n male = 12) adults who had been newly diagnosed with type two diabetes and were participants in the Early ACTID trial was undertaken. Deductive directed content analysis was performed using NVivo V10 and researcher triangulation to identify and describe patient experiences and narratives that reflected the motivation types outlined in self-determination theory and if/how these changed over time.
The findings revealed the diversity in motivation quality both between and within individuals over time and that patients with newly-diagnosed diabetes have multifaceted often competing motivations for lifestyle behaviour change. Applying self-determination theory, we identified that many participants reported relatively dominant controlled motivation to comply with lifestyle recommendations, avoid their non-compliance being "found out" or supress guilt following lapses in behaviour change attempts. Such narratives were accompanied by experiences of frustrating slow behaviour change progress. More autonomous motivation was expressed as something often achieved over time and reflected goals to improve health, quality of life or family time. Motivational internalisation was evident and some participants had integrated their behaviour change to a new way of life which they found resilient to common barriers.
Motivation for lifestyle change following diagnosis with type two diabetes is complex and can be relatively low in self-determination. To achieve the patient empowerment aspirations of current national health care plans, intervention developers, and clinicians would do well to consider the quality not just quantity of their patients' motivation.
ISRCTN ISRCTN92162869 . Retrospectively registered.
2 型糖尿病的诊断为个体改变其体力活动和饮食行为提供了机会。糖尿病治疗指南建议基于理论、以患者为中心的护理,并倡导为患者提供动机支持,但新诊断为糖尿病的患者的动机体验尚未得到充分研究。本研究以自我决定理论为框架,旨在定性探讨该患者群体在尝试生活方式改变时如何表达和体验不同类型的动机。
对早期 ACTID 试验的 30 名(女性 n=18,男性 n=12)新诊断为 2 型糖尿病的成年人的半结构化访谈数据进行了二次分析。使用 NVivo V10 进行演绎定向内容分析,并进行研究人员三角测量,以识别和描述反映自我决定理论中概述的动机类型的患者经验和叙述,以及这些类型如何随时间变化。
研究结果揭示了个体之间以及个体随时间变化的动机质量的多样性,并且新诊断为糖尿病的患者对生活方式行为改变有多种且常常相互竞争的动机。应用自我决定理论,我们发现许多参与者报告了相对主导的控制动机,以遵守生活方式建议,避免他们的不遵守行为被“发现”,或在行为改变尝试失败后抑制内疚感。这些叙述伴随着令人沮丧的行为改变进展缓慢的体验。更多的自主动机是随着时间的推移而表达的,反映了改善健康、生活质量或家庭时间的目标。动机内化是显而易见的,一些参与者已经将他们的行为改变融入了一种新的生活方式,他们发现这种方式对常见的障碍具有弹性。
2 型糖尿病诊断后生活方式改变的动机是复杂的,自我决定的动机可能相对较低。为了实现当前国家医疗保健计划中患者赋权的愿望,干预开发者和临床医生最好考虑患者动机的质量而不仅仅是数量。
ISRCTN ISRCTN81111344。回顾性注册。