Yazdani Faridokht, Abazari Parvaneh, Haghani Fariba, Iraj Bijan
Student Research Committee, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran.
Nursing and Midwifery Sciences Development Research Center, Najafabad Branch, Islamic Azad University, Najafabad, Iran.
J Educ Health Promot. 2021 Jan 28;10:18. doi: 10.4103/jehp.jehp_914_20. eCollection 2021.
A key step for improving the effectiveness of diabetes self-management education (DSME) is to identify its restrictors.
The aim of this study was to explore the restrictors of the effectiveness of DSME.
This descriptive qualitative study was conducted in March 2016-2017. Participants were 16 DSME providers (viz., physicians, nurses, nutritionists, and psychologists) and nine DSME receivers (viz., patients and their family members) - 25 in total. Semi-structured interviews were held for data collection. Interviews were transcribed word by word and analyzed through conventional content analysis approach proposed by Graneheim and Lundman.
The restrictors of the effectiveness of DSME were categorized into three main categories and 11 subcategories, namely patients' limited welcoming of DSME classes (allocating limited time for participation in DSME classes, inadequate knowledge about diabetes mellitus [DM] importance, inappropriate educational environment, and financial problems), unfavorable adherence to treatments: serious challenge (inattention to educations, poor motivation for adherence to medical recommendations, and inattention to the psychological aspects of DM), and the difficulty of adult education (the difficulty of changing health-related attitudes and behaviors, mere information delivery during education, adults' physical and perceptual limitations, and diabetes educators' limited competence in adult education).
The findings of the present study provide an in-depth understanding about the restrictors of the effectiveness of DSME. DM management authorities and policymakers can use these findings to develop strategies for improving the effectiveness of DSME.
提高糖尿病自我管理教育(DSME)有效性的关键一步是识别其限制因素。
本研究旨在探讨DSME有效性的限制因素。
这项描述性定性研究于2016年3月至2017年进行。参与者包括16名DSME提供者(即医生、护士、营养师和心理学家)和9名DSME接受者(即患者及其家庭成员),共25人。通过半结构化访谈收集数据。访谈逐字转录,并采用Graneheim和Lundman提出的传统内容分析法进行分析。
DSME有效性的限制因素分为三大类和11个子类别,即患者对DSME课程的接受度有限(为参加DSME课程分配的时间有限、对糖尿病重要性的认识不足、教育环境不合适以及经济问题)、治疗依从性差:严峻挑战(对教育不重视、坚持医疗建议的动力不足以及对糖尿病心理方面的忽视)以及成人教育的困难(改变与健康相关态度和行为的困难、教育过程中单纯的信息传递、成年人的身体和感知限制以及糖尿病教育者在成人教育方面的能力有限)。
本研究结果提供了对DSME有效性限制因素的深入理解。糖尿病管理当局和政策制定者可利用这些结果制定提高DSME有效性的策略。