| Literature DB >> 22726578 |
Catherine H Yu1, Janet Parsons, Muhammad Mamdani, Gerald Lebovic, Baiju R Shah, Onil Bhattacharyya, Andreas Laupacis, Sharon E Straus.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Given that patients provide the majority of their own diabetes care, patient self-management training has increasingly become recognized as an important strategy with which to improve quality of care. However, participation in self management programs is low. In addition, the efficacy of current behavioural interventions wanes over time, reducing the impact of self-management interventions on patient health. Web-based interventions have the potential to bridge the gaps in diabetes care and self-management.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22726578 PMCID: PMC3473319 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6947-12-57
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Knowledge-to-Action framework
| Identify problem. Identify, review, select knowledge | Patient self-management training has increasingly become recognized as an important strategy with which to narrow the care gap. Several systematic reviews have examined the impact of diverse self-management interventions and have demonstrated positive effects on knowledge self-reported dietary habits
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| Adapt knowledge to local context | In July 2008 the Ontario MOHLTC launched the Ontario Diabetes Strategy, to improve prevention and care for Ontarians with chronic diseases, starting with diabetes, through a mix of prevention, access to technology, personal planning and access to specialized resources and health professionals. All Ontarians with diabetes and their health care providers will be supported through a series of inter-related initiatives. As part of this larger initiative, there is an implementation plan for patient self-management tools, as well as a plan for measuring and reporting on improvements in clinical care and outcomes on a web-based patient portal. |
| Assess barriers to knowledge use | Barriers to knowledge use can occur at several levels, including the health care system, the health care team and organization, the health care profession, the patient and, finally, the guidelines or their education delivery system. Brown described a similar framework, and categorized barriers to diabetes care on three levels: organization, provider, and patient. Barriers at the patient level include acceptance of the diagnosis, education, self-motivation and adaptation to daily living. Poor adherence to guidelines may be a result of patient preferences, expectations or knowledge. Our initiative will focus on barriers at the patient level. |
| Select, tailor, implement interventions | (a) Selecting the intervention (Phase 1) |
| Monitor knowledge use | A mixed method study, as described in the main text, will be conducted, consisting of an interrupted time series and individual interviews (Phase 5). |
| Evaluate outcomes | |
| Sustain knowledge use | Barriers to sustained knowledge use will be addressed in the planning phase of tool development, implementation and dissemination, and further explored upon completion of the pilot study with qualitative methodology (Phase 5). |
Figure 1Evidence and theory-based framework for intervention development. Schematic depicting theoretical underpinnings (health information model, self-efficacy) and evidence base (systematic reviews of electronic tools, behavior change websites) contributing to website features.
Description of primary outcome scales
| Self-efficacy | Modified Grossman Self-efficacy for Diabetes Scale
[ | The scale contains 25 items that measure the intensity of self-efficacy for activities of the diabetes regimen. Subjects are asked to describe how much they believe they could or could not do what was stated. The responses on this 6-point scale range from “ |
| Self-care behavior | Summary of Diabetes Self-Care Activities Measure – Revised
[ | Items selected from this self-report instrument assess participants’ frequency (over the past 7 days) of engaging in diabetes self-care behaviors, including following a healthy diet, spacing out carbohydrates evenly across the day, physical activity, self-monitoring of blood glucose testing, foot care, and medication and/or insulin taking. For each diabetes self-care behavior, participants are asked to respond using the following prompt: “ |
| Diabetes-specific quality of life | Diabetes Distress Scale
[ | The DDS is a 17 item instrument that assesses emotional distress and functioning specific to living with diabetes. Responses are scored on a 6-point Likert-type scale from 1 = “ |