1. Nurse‐led self‐management education and support programme on self‐management behaviour and quality of life among adults with type 2 diabetes: A pilot randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Diriba, Dereje Chala, Leung, Doris Y. P., and Suen, Lorna K. P.
- Subjects
REPEATED measures design ,PATIENT compliance ,SELF-management (Psychology) ,ECOLOGY ,COMPUTER software ,RESEARCH funding ,PILOT projects ,STATISTICAL sampling ,CULTURE ,TEACHING aids ,INTERVIEWING ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,COMMUNITIES ,HOSPITALS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,FAMILIES ,QUALITY of life ,TYPE 2 diabetes ,HEALTH behavior ,ANALYSIS of variance ,SOCIAL support ,PATIENT satisfaction ,PATIENT aftercare ,GROUP process - Abstract
Aim: This study examined the preliminary effects of a nurse‐led self‐management education and support programme on the self‐management behaviours and quality of life among people with type 2 diabetes in Western Ethiopia. Methods: A pilot randomized controlled trial was conducted between January and August 2021. Participants were recruited in the hospital and randomly assigned to the control arm to continue usual care (n = 38) or the intervention arm to receive usual care and the diabetes self‐management education and support programme (n = 38) in the community. Self‐management behaviours and quality of life were assessed using a 10‐item summary of diabetes self‐care activity (expanded) scale and a 34‐item diabetes quality of life measure, respectively, at baseline and 2 months after follow‐up. Generalized estimating equation models were used to examine the preliminary effects of the programme on the outcomes. Results: Preliminary results indicated that the programme outperformed usual care in self‐management practise, with large effect sizes immediately postintervention and at 2 months after the intervention, and quality of life at 2 months after the intervention. Conclusion: A nurse‐led diabetes self‐management education and support intervention, including the families of people with diabetes, may be an option to boost the self‐management practise and quality of life of patients with diabetes. Summary statement: What is already known about this topic? Family‐supported diabetes self‐management education intervention produced inconclusive effects on self‐management behaviour and quality of life. What this paper adds? A social‐cognitive theory‐guided, culture‐tailored, and community‐based diabetes self‐management education and support programme resulted in a preliminary effect on improving self‐management behaviour and quality of life.A nurse‐led diabetes self‐management education and support programme intervention, including the families of patients, may be an option to boost the self‐management practise and quality of life of people with diabetes. The implications of this paper: Culturally tailored diabetes self‐management education and support programme could be an option to improve self‐management behaviour and enhance quality of life.Community‐based nurse‐delivered diabetes self‐management education and support can improve self‐management behaviours and enhance quality of life in 2 months duration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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