Health, University of Bath, Bath, UK
Health, The Smae Institute, Maidenhead, Windsor and Maidenhead, UK.
BMJ Open Diabetes Res Care. 2022 Nov;10(6). doi: 10.1136/bmjdrc-2022-003034.
Diabetic foot ulcers contribute significantly to morbidity and mortality associated with diabetes, but are preventable with good foot self-care. This study sought to explore the perspectives of patients and healthcare professionals (HCPs) on barriers and/or facilitators to foot self-care behaviors in diabetes and areas of consensus and/or tension between patient and HCP perspectives.
This was a sequential, qualitative study that used a hermeneutic phenomenological approach. Phase I involved nine in-depth, semi-structured patient interviews. Phase II involved seven in-depth semi-structured interviews with HCPs (podiatrists, diabetes nurses, foot health practitioners (FHPs) and general practitioners (GPs)). In phase III, findings from phases I and II were brought back to two patient interview groups (five patients in total) to try and identify any areas of consensus and tension between HCP and patient perspectives.
Patient and HCP perspectives had several areas of alignment: concerns over consequences of diabetes complications; the importance of patient education and frustrations around aspects of health service delivery. There were also some notable tensions identified: mixed messaging from HCPs around whose responsibility patient foot health is; and who patients should initially consult following the development of a foot problem. Overall, patients expressed that motivation to undertake good foot self-care behaviors was generated from their lived experiences, and was enhanced when this aligned with the information they received from HCPs. HCPs appeared to attribute lack of patient motivation to lack of knowledge, which was not raised by patients.
This study has identified points of misalignment between the views of patients and practitioners that may help to explain why adherence to foot self-care among patients with diabetes is low. Our results suggest that better outcomes may stem from HCPs focusing on supporting autonomous motivation for self-care and enhancing the rationale through referencing patients' own experience rather than focussing on increasing patient knowledge. Renewed focus on consistency of messaging by HCPs around the roles and responsibilities relating to foot health in diabetes, and the benefit of foot-specific training being provided to non-foot specialist HCPs may also help to improve uptake and adherence to foot self-care behaviors in diabetes.
糖尿病足溃疡与糖尿病相关的发病率和死亡率密切相关,但通过良好的足部自我护理是可以预防的。本研究旨在探讨患者和医疗保健专业人员(HCPs)对糖尿病患者足部自我护理行为的障碍和/或促进因素的看法,以及患者和 HCPs 观点之间的共识和/或紧张领域。
这是一项采用解释学现象学方法的序贯定性研究。第一阶段包括 9 名患者的深入半结构化访谈。第二阶段包括 7 名 HCP(足病医生、糖尿病护士、足部健康从业者(FHP)和全科医生(GP))的深入半结构化访谈。在第三阶段,将第一和第二阶段的结果带回给两组患者访谈(共 5 名患者),以尝试确定 HCP 和患者观点之间的任何共识和紧张领域。
患者和 HCP 的观点有几个一致的地方:对糖尿病并发症后果的担忧;患者教育的重要性以及对医疗服务提供方面的不满。还确定了一些明显的紧张关系:HCP 对患者足部健康责任的说法不一致;以及患者在足部出现问题后应首先咨询谁。总的来说,患者表示,进行良好的足部自我护理行为的动机来自于他们的生活经历,并且当这与他们从 HCP 那里获得的信息一致时,动机就会增强。HCP 似乎将患者缺乏动机归因于缺乏知识,而患者并没有提出这一点。
本研究确定了患者和从业者观点之间的一些不一致之处,这可能有助于解释为什么糖尿病患者对足部自我护理的依从性低。我们的研究结果表明,更好的结果可能源于 HCP 专注于支持自主自我护理的动机,并通过参考患者自身的经验来增强其合理性,而不是专注于增加患者的知识。HCP 重新关注与糖尿病足部健康相关的角色和责任的信息一致性,以及为非足部专业 HCP 提供足部特定培训,也可能有助于提高糖尿病患者对足部自我护理行为的接受度和依从性。