| Literature DB >> 20459674 |
Helle Terkildsen Maindal1, Marit Kirkevold, Annelli Sandbaek, Torsten Lauritzen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The evidence gained from effective self-management interventions is often criticised for the ambiguity of its active components, and consequently the obstruction of their implementation into daily practice.Our aim is to report how an intervention development model aids the careful selection of active components in an intervention for people with dysglycaemia.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20459674 PMCID: PMC2882382 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-10-114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Figure 1Phases used designing a complex healthcare intervention, developed by the Medical Research Council, UK (adopted from Campbell et al, 2000) [13].
Aims and methods developing the "Ready to Act" programme targeted people with dysglycaemia
| Phase | Aim | Methods |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-clinical: | To explore evidence and theories to identify intervention components and constructs relevant as outcome measures | Literature from a Medline search 1995-2007 was reviewed: Keywords: "attitude to health" ( |
| Phase I: | To delineate the intervention components, model a preliminary intervention and suggest possible outcomes | The theoretical concepts were integrated with practical issues. The structure, pedagogical goals and activities, the training needs of the healthcare educators and possible outcomes were defined in collaboration between the project manager and physiotherapists, GPs, dieticians and nurses with expertise in dysglycaemia and/or health promotion. |
| Phase II: | To describe a replicable intervention to be used in an exploratory trial and to test the preliminary intervention in two settings: a GP practice and a local healthcare centre. | Trained multidisciplinary teams tested the intervention in two groups of eight participants diagnosed with dysglycaemia in "The ADDITION study" [ |
Integrating empirical themes with theoretical constructs (preclinical phase) to achieve learning objectives and define learning activities (phase I)
| Empirical themes | Theoretical constructs | Learning objectives | Learning activities |
|---|---|---|---|
| Variations in motivation for acting on the new diagnosis | Internal motivation (SDT) Self-regulatory motivation (ALT) Ambivalence (SCT) | Enhance motivation | Individual motivational interviews aimed at clarifying expectations, ambivalence (decision-balance) and assessment of self-efficacy/perceived competence at dealing with the new diagnosis. Intrinsic motivation to individual actions is supported by individual goal setting and action planning. Feed back is provided. |
| Lack of knowledge about health actions | Action, knowledge and environment influence each other dynamically (SCT) Knowledge acquisition (ALT) Purposeful rationale (SDT) | Support informed decision-making | Group sessions on knowledge of health risks and health actions e.g. diet, exercise, action planning is provided by multidisciplinary teams, which means that diabetes/practice nurses, dietician, physiotherapist, and GPs work to tailor an intervention to meet the specific needs of the particular group. |
| Lack of skills to change behavior | Skills acquisition in real settings (ALT) Action experience and support Self-efficacy (SCT) Perceived competence (SDT) | Achieve | Action experiences were planned as part of each session and the participants were offered e.g. supervised aerobic exercise in safe environment, and skills training, e.g. adequate use of blood sugar measurements. During the group sessions the participants work with goal setting and action planning to prepare each of the participants for further actions after the intervention. |
| Need for collaboration with professionals and social support | Social reflection (ALT) Collective Self-efficacy (SCT) Social support (SCT) Social relatedness (SDT) | Support | The intervention is primarily group-based to support the exchange of experiences and to build up collective self-efficacy. The intervention was locally based to make local resources visible, such as health professionals, peers and environments. |
ALT: Action Learning Theory SCT: Social Cognitive Theory SDT: Self-determination Theory
Figure 2The action plan used in the "Ready to Act" programme.
Figure 3Components and content of the 12 week "Ready to Act" programme aiming for action competence in dysglycaemia.