Spencer-Bonilla Gabriela, Serrano Valentina, Gao Catherine, Sanchez Manuel, Carroll Katherine, Gionfriddo Michael R, Behnken Emma M, Hargraves Ian, Boehmer Kasey, May Carl, Montori Victor M
Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA.
Department of Nutrition, Diabetes and Metabolism, Escuela de Medicina, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile.
Mayo Clin Proc Innov Qual Outcomes. 2021 Apr 8;5(2):359-367. doi: 10.1016/j.mayocpiqo.2021.01.006. eCollection 2021 Apr.
To use quantitative and qualitative methods to characterize the work patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) enact and explore the interactions between illness, treatment, and life.
In this mixed-methods, descriptive study, adult patients with T2DM seen at the outpatient diabetes clinic at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, from February 1, 2016, through March 31, 2017, were invited to participate. The study had 3 phases. In phase 1, the Patient Experience with Treatment and Self-management (PETS) scale was used to quantify treatment burden. In phase 2, a convenience sample of patients used a smartphone application to describe, in real time, time spent completing diabetes self-management tasks and to upload descriptive digital photographs. In phase 3, these data were explored in qualitative interviews that were analyed by 2 investigators using deductive analysis.
Of 162 participants recruited, 160 returned the survey (phase 1); of the 50 participants who used the smartphone application (phase 2), we interviewed 17 (phase 3). The areas in which patients reported highest treatment burden were difficulty with negotiating health services (eg, coordinating medical appointments), medical expenses, and mental/physical exhaustion with self-care. Participants reported that medical appointments required about 2.5 hours per day, and completing administrative tasks related to health care required about 45 minutes. Time spent on health behaviors varied widely-from 2 to 60 minutes in a given 3-hour period. Patients' experience of a task's burden did not always correlate with the time spent on that task.
The most burdensome tasks to patients with T2DM included negotiating health care services, affording medications, and completing administrative tasks even though they were not the most time-consuming activities. To be minimally disruptive, diabetes care should minimize the delegation of administrative tasks to patients.
运用定量和定性方法描述2型糖尿病(T2DM)患者的日常活动,并探讨疾病、治疗与生活之间的相互作用。
在这项混合方法的描述性研究中,邀请了2016年2月1日至2017年3月31日期间在明尼苏达州罗切斯特市梅奥诊所糖尿病门诊就诊的成年T2DM患者参与。该研究分为3个阶段。在第1阶段,使用治疗与自我管理患者体验(PETS)量表对治疗负担进行量化。在第2阶段,选取一组方便样本患者使用智能手机应用程序实时描述完成糖尿病自我管理任务所花费的时间,并上传描述性数码照片。在第3阶段,通过定性访谈对这些数据进行探究,由两名研究人员采用演绎分析方法进行分析。
在招募的162名参与者中,160人返回了调查问卷(第1阶段);在50名使用智能手机应用程序的参与者中(第2阶段),我们对17人进行了访谈(第3阶段)。患者报告治疗负担最高的方面包括协调医疗服务困难(如安排医疗预约)、医疗费用以及自我护理导致的精神/身体疲惫。参与者报告称,每天的医疗预约大约需要2.5小时,完成与医疗保健相关的行政任务大约需要45分钟。在给定的3小时时间段内,用于健康行为的时间差异很大,从2分钟到60分钟不等。患者对一项任务负担的体验并不总是与完成该任务所花费的时间相关。
对于T2DM患者来说,最繁重的任务包括协调医疗服务、支付药物费用以及完成行政任务,尽管这些并非最耗时的活动。为了尽量减少干扰,糖尿病护理应尽量减少将行政任务委派给患者。