Stone Jenine Y, Mayberry Lindsay S, Clouse Kate, Mulvaney Shelagh
Vanderbilt University, 461 21st Avenue South, Nashville, TN, 37240, USA.
AMCR Institute, Escondido, CA, USA.
Curr Diab Rep. 2023 Apr;23(4):43-58. doi: 10.1007/s11892-023-01499-y. Epub 2023 Feb 7.
Diabetes is a chronic condition that requires consistent self-management for optimal health outcomes. People with diabetes are prone to burnout, cognitive burden, and sub-optimal performance of self-management tasks. Interventions that focus on habit formation have the potential to increase engagement by facilitating automaticity of self-management task performance. The purpose of this review is to (1) clarify the conceptualizations of habit formation and behavioral automaticity in the context of health behavior interventions, (2) review the evidence of habit in relation to behaviors relevant to diabetes self-management, and (3) discuss opportunities for incorporating habit formation and automaticity into diabetes self-management interventions.
Modern habit research describes a habit as a behavior that results over time from an automatic mental process. Automatic behaviors are experienced as cue-dependent, goal-independent, unconscious, and efficient. Habit formation requires context-dependent repetition to form cue-behavior associations. Results of diabetes habit studies are mixed. Observational studies have shown positive associations between habit strength and target self-management behaviors such as taking medication and monitoring blood glucose, as well as glycemic outcomes such as HbA1c. However, intervention studies conducted in similar populations have not demonstrated a significant benefit of habit-forming interventions compared to controls, possibly due to varying techniques used to promote habit formation. Automaticity of self-management behaviors has the potential to minimize the burden associated with performance of self-management tasks and ultimately improve outcomes for people with diabetes. Future studies should focus on refining interventions focused on context-dependent repetition to promote habit formation and better measurement of habit automaticity in diabetes self-management.
糖尿病是一种慢性病,需要持续的自我管理以实现最佳健康结果。糖尿病患者容易出现倦怠、认知负担以及自我管理任务表现欠佳的情况。专注于习惯养成的干预措施有可能通过促进自我管理任务执行的自动化来提高参与度。本综述的目的是:(1)在健康行为干预的背景下阐明习惯养成和行为自动化的概念;(2)回顾与糖尿病自我管理相关行为的习惯证据;(3)讨论将习惯养成和自动化纳入糖尿病自我管理干预措施的机会。
现代习惯研究将习惯描述为一种随着时间推移由自动心理过程产生的行为。自动行为被体验为依赖线索、与目标无关、无意识且高效的。习惯养成需要依赖情境的重复来形成线索 - 行为关联。糖尿病习惯研究的结果不一。观察性研究表明习惯强度与目标自我管理行为(如服药和监测血糖)以及血糖结果(如糖化血红蛋白)之间存在正相关。然而,在类似人群中进行的干预性研究并未证明与对照组相比,习惯养成干预措施有显著益处,这可能是由于用于促进习惯养成的技术各不相同。自我管理行为的自动化有可能将与自我管理任务执行相关的负担降至最低,并最终改善糖尿病患者的结局。未来的研究应专注于完善侧重于依赖情境重复的干预措施以促进习惯养成,并更好地测量糖尿病自我管理中的习惯自动化程度。