| Literature DB >> 27354775 |
Zahra Khalil Alsairafi1, Kevin Michael Geoffrey Taylor2, Felicity J Smith1, Abdulnabi T Alattar3.
Abstract
The increased prevalence of diabetes in Middle Eastern countries is a health policy priority. Important risk factors for diabetes have been identified. Lifestyle interventions and adherence to medications are central to disease prevention and management. This review focuses on the management of type 2 diabetes mellitus in Middle Eastern countries. The aim is to identify the ways in which knowledge, health beliefs, and social and cultural factors influence adherence to medication and lifestyle measures. Thirty-four studies were identified following a systematic search of the literature. The studies describe the influence of knowledge, health beliefs, culture, and lifestyle on the management of type 2 diabetes mellitus in the Middle East. Findings indicate a lack of health knowledge about diabetes among populations, which has implications for health behaviors, medication adherence, and treatment outcomes. Many identified health beliefs and cultural lifestyle factors, such as religious beliefs, beliefs about fasting during Ramadan, and sedentary lifestyles played a role in patients' decisions. For better management of this disease, a collaborative approach between patients, their families, health care professionals, and governments should be adopted. Implementing behavioral strategies and psychological interventions that incorporate all health care professionals in the management process have been shown to be effective methods. Such services help patients change their behavior. However, the utilization of such services and interventions is still limited in Arabian countries. Physicians in the Middle East are the health care professionals most involved in the care process.Entities:
Keywords: Ramadan; adherence; diet; health beliefs; lifestyle; type 2 diabetes mellitus
Year: 2016 PMID: 27354775 PMCID: PMC4910608 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S104335
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Figure 1Summary of literature search procedure for this review.
Abbreviation: T1DM, type 1 diabetes mellitus.
Studies of determinants of adherence to treatment and self-management behavior among patients with DM in Middle Eastern countries
| Study/setting/location | Sample | Methods/measures | Study findings and conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Al-Kaabi et al, | 409 patients with DM | Cross-sectional study. | 24% of patients read food labeling, 76% reported being unable to distinguish between high and low carbohydrate index food items and no one reported counting calorie intake, 46% reported never seen by a dietitian since their diagnosis. |
| Abahussain and El-Zubier, | 91 patients with DM | Knowledge of females with DM, school teachers about the disease, and adherence to medications, diet, and exercise measured by a structured questionnaire. | 73% of patients know about the symptoms of hypoglycemia, 52.7% of patients complied with treatments, 50% followed diet, and 5.5% complied with exercise. 25% using herbs for the management of diabetes. |
| Mabry et al, | Not stated | Review | The physical activity, which is a modifiable risk factor for several chronic diseases, of patients in the GCC countries is very low. |
| Salti et al, | 12,243 patients with DM | Retrospective transversal survey. | 42.8% of patients with T1DM and 78.7% with T2DM fasted for at least 15 days. Less than 50% changed their treatment dose (one-fourth treated with oral antidiabetic drugs and one-third using insulin. |
| Kamel et al, | 300 patients with DM | Cross-sectional study. | 1.7% of patients had poor, 20% satisfactory, and 78.3% very good compliance. |
| Khattab et al, | 294 patients with DM | Cross-sectional study. | 1.4% of patients had poor compliance, 14% fair compliance, and 84.2% good compliance. |
| Roaeid and Kablan, | 805 patients with DM | Cross-sectional study. | 27.1% of patients do not take their treatments regularly. |
| Al-Qasem et al, | Patients with chronic diseases | Review | Nonadherence to medications among patients with chronic diseases in Middle Eastern countries constitutes a problem. |
| Elliott et al, | 309 patients with T2DM | Prospective survey. | 26% of patients unaware how to recognize or respond to hypoglycemia, 49% and 60% do not recognize hyperglycemia or respond to it, respectively, 62% do not monitor their blood glucose levels, one-third of patients using insulin, independently adjust dosages. |
| Al-Saeedi et al, | 1,039 patients with DM | Cross-sectional study. | 39% of patients had a high treatment misconception score. 16.5% think that cure from diabetes is expected following a short course of treatment and 23% think that they could eat as long as medications are taken. |
| Shams and Barakat, | 226 patients with T2DM | Cross-sectional study. | Adherence to treatment, diet, and exercise were suboptimal. Patients’ knowledge about the disease and beliefs about medicines significantly affected therapeutic adherence. |
| Alhewiti, | 408 patients with chronic diseases including diabetes | Cross-sectional study. | 51% of participants who had diabetes were low adherents. Low adherence was associated with negative beliefs about medicines. |
| Sweileh et al, | 405 patients with T2DM | Cross-sectional study. | 42.7% of the participants were nonadherents (MMAS-8 score <6). Nonadherence was significantly associated with disease-related knowledge, beliefs about necessity of medicines, and concerns about adverse consequences of medicines. |
| Aflakseir, | 102 patients with T2DM | Not stated. | Patients having concerns about negative effects of medicines show low levels of adherence to medications. |
| Alhyas et al, | 9 health care professionals providing care to patients with T2DM | Qualitative research. | Barriers that affect health care professionals’ motivation in providing good quality care are heavy workload, lack of patient compliance, awareness and cultural beliefs, and attitudes about diabetes. |
| Al-Saeedi et al, | 1,039 patients with DM | Not stated. | 15.6% of patients believe in the safety and efficacy of traditional medicines. 25.8% believe that they might be beneficial. |
| Jeragh-Alhaddad et al, | 20 patients with T2DM | Qualitative study. | Many factors were found to impact patients’ adherence to medicines. These were related to health care providers and system, culture, and the patients themselves. |
| Ali et al, | 75 women at high risk of T2DM | Qualitative study. | Low motivation, lack of social support, competing demands, lack of culturally sensitive exercise facilities, and sociocultural norms are the main barriers cited by participants. |
| Hui et al | Patients with T2DM | Review | Structured education should be focused to patients who wish to fast in Ramadan, for better managing their condition while fasting. |
| Mishali et al, | 119 patients with DM | Not stated. | Self-efficacy impacts on patients’ adherence to their treatments. |
| Aflakseir, | 178 patients with diabetes, coronary heart disease, chronic pain, and hypertension | Not stated. | 42% of patients reported nonadherence to their prescriptions, 58% adhere to their medicines. |
| Yekta et al, | 400 patients with DM | Cross-sectional study. | Patients’ self-care practices were good in 15.1%, moderate in 58.7%, and poor in 26.2%. |
| Jamous et al, | 131 patients with DM | Cross-sectional descriptive study. | 38% of patients had high adherence, 58% had medium, and 16.9% had low adherence rates. |
| Jimmy et al, | 158 patients with T2DM | Cross-sectional study. | Adherence to medicines of patients with T2DM was good. Forgetfulness was the main factor that contributed to nonadherence followed by low beliefs about the necessity of taking medicines and the perceived side effects. |
| Al Shafaee et al, | 563 adults (general population) | Not stated knowledge and perception of diabetes using a questionnaire | Knowledge of diabetes was suboptimal. Only 47%, 57%, and 55% responded correctly to questions on diabetes definition, symptoms, and complications respectively. Only 5,21%, and 17% identified obesity, physical activity, and family history, respectively, as risk factors for diabetes. |
| Ibrahim et al, | 240 patients with chronic diseases | Cross-sectional study. | Forgetfulness is the main reason for nonintentional noncompliance (75%) and polypharmacy is the main cause for intentional noncompliance (13.3%). |
| Khattab et al, | 917 patients with T2DM | Systematic random sample. | 65.1% of patients not following eating plan as recommended by dietitian, had negative attitude toward diabetes, increased barriers to adherence scale scores, and poor glycemic control. |
| Abdulhadi et al, | 27 patients with T2DM | Qualitative research. | Weaknesses identified by patients include health education and professional competency of health care providers. |
| Biderman et al, | 630 patients with diabetes, hypertension, or ischemic heart diseases | Systematic random sample from computer database. | 51.9% reported difficulties in changing their dietary habits, 50.3% in changing their physical activities, 22.7% in attending follow-up visits, and 9.8% in taking medications. |
| Serour et al, | 334 patients with T2DM, hypertension or both | Prospective study. | Barriers to adherence to diet: unwillingness, difficulty adhering to a diet different than rest of family, social gatherings. Barriers to adherence to exercise: lack of time, coexisting diseases, and adverse weather conditions. |
| Badran and Laher, | Patients with T2DM | Review | Several socioeconomic, dietary, and lifestyle factors are associated with T2DM in Arabic-speaking countries. |
| Al-Shookri et al, | Patients with T2DM | Review | Lifestyle and behavior of patients with T2DM in Oman and other Middle East countries contribute to the high prevalence of this disease. |
| Abdulhadi et al, | 90 consultations between doctors and nurses involved in the management of patients with T2DM | Observational study. | 52% of doctors’ consultations were suboptimal. |
| Elis et al, | 41,936 patients with DM | Cross-sectional study. | 13% of patients achieved all three target levels. |
Abbreviations: DM, diabetes mellitus; T1DM, type 1 diabetes mellitus; T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus; GCC, Gulf Cooperation Council; MMAS-8, 8-item Morisky Medication Adherence Scale; BMQ, Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire; MDKT, Michigan diabetes knowledge test; IPQ, Illness Perception Questionnaire; MARS, Medication Adherence Report Scale; RTQ, Resistance to Treatment Questionnaire; DTSQ, Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire; OHAs, oral hypoglycemic agents.