Abstract

There has been little focus on designing tailored diabetes management strategies in developing countries. The aim of this study is to develop a theory-driven, tailored and context-specific complex intervention for the effective management of type 2 diabetes at a tertiary care setting of a developing country. We conducted interviews and focus groups with patients, health professionals, and policymakers and undertook thematic analysis to identify gaps in diabetes management. The results of our previously completed systematic review informed data collection. We used the United Kingdom Medical Research Council framework to guide the development of the intervention. Results comprised 48 interviews, two focus groups with 11 participants and three co-design panels with 24 participants. We identified a lack of structured type 2 diabetes education, counselling, and collaborative care of type 2 diabetes. Through triangulation of the evidence obtained from data collection, we developed an intervention called VICKY (patient-centred collaborative care and structured diabetes education and counselling) for effective management of type 2 diabetes. VICKY comprised five components: (1) patient-centred collaborative care; (2) referral system for patients across transitions of care between different health professionals of the diabetes care team; (3) tools for the provision of collaborative care and documentation of care; (4) diabetes education and counselling by trained diabetes educators; and (5) contextualised diabetes education curriculum, educational materials, and documentation tools for diabetes education and counselling. Implementation of the intervention may help to promote evidence-based, patient-centred, and contextualised diabetes care for improved patient outcomes in a developing country.

Highlights

  • Type 2 diabetes is a global public health problem and an economic burden to nations, developing countries [1]

  • We identified that improving the effectiveness of type 2 diabetes management for patients with type 2 diabetes was the specific problem existing at the diabetes centre of TASH

  • Focus groups, and co-design workshops that had challenges for the effective management of type 2 diabetes related to: 1

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Type 2 diabetes is a global public health problem and an economic burden to nations, developing countries [1]. It contributes to cardiovascular complications, such as ischemic heart disease, heart failure, and renal disorders [2,3,4]. In Ethiopia, similar factors contributing to ineffective management of type 2 diabetes exist, including inadequate collaborative care among pharmacists, physicians, and nurses; lack of structured diabetes education; and high levels of medication therapy problems and diabetes complications [13,17,18,19,20,21,22,23]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call