Supporting a curriculum for delivering Type 2 diabetes patient self-management education: A patient-needs assessment

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Abstract

The National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) guideline for diabetes patient education offers little to inform National Health Services (NHS) Trusts in the curriculum design of self-management education programmes. The study aim was to conduct a patient-needs assessment of the educational curriculum content and support needs for Type 2 diabetes self-management. Different stages of the condition were chosen to identify whether needs remained constant or changed with time and experience. Six focus groups were convened for people who had recently received a new diagnosis or changed therapy. Twenty-three participants were recruited from primary care and the media in the UK. The educational curriculum support needs comprised: access to care and support, continuity of health care professional, lay support, high-quality care and support, and a positive cognitive appraisal of experiences. Needs were broadly similar irrespective of the new change situation. The current emphasis on lay support concurs with a proportion of the needs of our study participants. Motivational communications with patients need to be prioritized to enable patients to address therapeutic goals. © 2005, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.

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Sturt, J., Hearnshaw, H., Barlow, J., & Hainsworth, J. (2005). Supporting a curriculum for delivering Type 2 diabetes patient self-management education: A patient-needs assessment. Primary Health Care Research and Development, 6(4), 291–299. https://doi.org/10.1191/1463423605pc253oa

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