Abstract

The prevalence of type-2 diabetes (T2D) is increasing, particularly among South Asian (SA) communities. Previous research has highlighted the heterogeneous nature of SA ethnicity and the need to consider culture in SA patients’ self-management of T2D. We conducted a critical interpretative synthesis (CIS) which aimed to a) develop a new and comprehensive insight into the psychology which underpins SA patients’ T2D self-management behaviours and b) present a conceptual model to inform future T2D interventions. A systematic search of the literature retrieved 19 articles, including 536 participants. These were reviewed using established CIS procedures. Analysis identified seven constructs, from which an overarching synthesizing argument ‘Cultural Conflict’ was derived. Our findings suggest that patients reconstruct knowledge to manage their psychological, behavioural, and cultural conflicts, impacting decisional conflicts associated with T2D self-management and health professional advice (un)consciously. Those unable to resolve this conflict were more likely to default towards cultural identity, continue to align with cultural preferences rather than health professional guidance, and reduce engagement with self-management. Our synthesis and supporting model promote novel ideas for self-management of T2D care for SA patients. Specifically, health professionals should be trained and supported to explore and mitigate negative health beliefs to enable patients to manage social-cultural influences that impact their self-management behaviours.

Highlights

  • Our analysis suggests that participants renegotiate their cultural acceptance to resolve such conflict and engage in Type 2 diabetes (T2D) self-management behaviours

  • A key feature of this interpretative synthesis is that the analysis was critical, whereby it questioned the published literature on the concept of South Asian (SA) patients’ beliefs which impacted on engagement with T2D healthcare and self-management behaviours

  • Previous reviews [39,40] have not synthesised findings to consider SA patients’ underlying psychological processes; we suggest that this new synthesising argument has considered SA patients’ needs from a psychological rather than a practical based response

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Over the past 60–70 years, the UK population has become more ethnically diverse. The UK’s most recent census in 2011 [1] recorded 1,451,862 residents of Indian, 1,174,983 of Pakistani, and 451,529 of Bangladeshi ethnicity, equalling a South Asian (SA) population of 4.9 per cent of the UK total (excluding other Asian groups and people of mixed ethnicity). The UK makes-up a significant portion of the SA migrant population

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