| Literature DB >> 30804666 |
Emmanuel Cosson1,2, Christine Mauchant3, Imane Benabbad3, Gilles Le Pape4, Marion Le Bleis3, Frédérique Bailleul3, Jean-Daniel Lalau5,6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate perceptions of people with type 2 diabetes (T2D) and treating physicians living in France toward insulin therapy.Entities:
Keywords: patient perceptions; patient-physician relationship; physician perceptions; psychological insulin resistance
Year: 2019 PMID: 30804666 PMCID: PMC6375534 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S181363
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Demographics of people with type 2 (T2D) diabetes and physicians
| People with T2D | |
|---|---|
| All respondents (n=590) | |
| Male/female, n (%) | 373 (63.2)/217 (36.8) |
| Age, n (%) | |
| <50 years | 118 (20.0) |
| ≥50 to ≤59 years | 153 (25.9) |
| ≥60 years | 319 (54.1) |
| Retired/active employment, n (%) | 281 (47.6)/224 (37.9) |
| Duration of T2D diagnosis, n (%) | |
| >25 years | 45 (7.6) |
| 25–15 years | 103 (17.5) |
| 15–10 years | 269 (45.6) |
| <10 years | 173 (29.3) |
| Respondents treated with basal insulin (n=388) | |
| Male/female, n (%) | 250 (64.4)/138 (35.6) |
| Duration of treatment with basal insulin, n (%) | |
| 2–24 months | 100 (25.8) |
| >2 to <6 years | 139 (35.8) |
| ≥6 years | 149 (38.4) |
| All respondents (n=130) | |
| Diabetologists/endocrinologists, n (%) | 65 (50.0) |
| General practitioners, n (%) | 65 (50.0) |
| Age, n (%) | |
| <35 years | 14 (10.8) |
| 35–45 years | 14 (10.8) |
| 46–50 years | 15 (11.5) |
| 51–55 years | 22 (16.9) |
| ≥56 years | 65 (50.0) |
| Duration of practicing medicine, n (%) | |
| <10 years | 25 (19.2) |
| 11–20 years | 29 (22.3) |
| >20 years | 76 (58.4) |
| Diabetologists/endocrinologists (n=65) | |
| Location of practice, n (%) | |
| Hospital | 22 (33.8) |
| Community | 24 (36.9) |
| Hospital and community | 19 (29.2) |
Feelings relating to insulin treatment in 590 patients with type 2 diabetes using a Likert scale (1 [least likely] to 10 [most likely])
| Patients on oral glucose-lowering drugs, n=202 | Patients taking insulin n=388 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before initiation | At initiation | After initiation | ||||
| 2–24 months, | 2–24 months, | 2–24 months, | >2 to <6 years, | ≥6 years, | ||
| Guilt | 3.8±3.3 | 3.8±3.3 | 3.6±3.2 | 2.8±2.9 | 3.7±3.3 | 2.6±2.9 |
| Distress | 5.2±3.5 | 4.5±3.1 | 4.4±3.1 | 3.1±2.9 | 4.1±3.2 | 3.0±2.7 |
| Detachment | 3.4±3.2 | 3.2±3.3 | 2.9±3.1 | 2.8±3.2 | 2.8±3.0 | 2.9±3.2 |
| Reassurance | 4.5±3.0 | 5.1±2.9 | 5.5±3.0 | 6.6±2.6 | 6.9±2.3 | 6.6±2.7 |
| Willingness | 2.6±2.9 | 4.4±3.2 | 4.6±3.2 | 5.7±2.9 | 6.3±2.9 | 6.3±2.9 |
Notes: Data are means ± SD. Questions dealing with recall of feelings before and at initiation (b and c) are shown only for patients treated with insulin for ≤24 months to limit memory bias.
Let us now talk about insulin treatments. How would you describe the nature and intensity of your feelings about this treatment?
In retrospect and before receiving insulin treatment, how would you describe the nature and intensity of your feelings about this treatment?
At the time of the initial prescription of your insulin treatment, how did you feel in nature and intensity about your feelings about this insulin treatment?
Finally, today, how would you describe the nature and intensity of your feelings about this treatment?
Current insulin-treatment duration.
Perceptions related to insulin treatment in 590 patients with type 2 diabetes
| Patients on oral glucose-lowering drugs, n=202 | Patients taking insulin, n=388 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before initiation | After initiation | ||||
| 2–24 months, | 2–24 months, | >2 to <6 years, | ≥6 years, | ||
| Sign of disease progression | 138 (68) | 54 (54) | 22 (22) | 41 (29) | 34 (23) |
| More restrictive treatment (self-injection, increased risk of hypoglycemia, and need for self-monitoring of blood-glucose levels) | 122 (60) | 51 (51) | 36 (36) | 50 (36) | 46 (31) |
| Sign of transition to true diabetes | 110 (54) | 37 (37) | 23 (23) | 22 (16) | 23 (15) |
| Treatment with higher social impact (disease more difficult to conceal, fewer social interactions and travel) | 66 (33) | 32 (32) | 28 (28) | 39 (28) | 40 (27) |
| Treatment with risk of hypoglycemia | 49 (24) | 36 (36) | 19 (19) | 37 (27) | 42 (28) |
| Flexible treatment with possibility of adapting doses according to need | 43 (21) | 29 (29) | 39 (39) | 53 (38) | 65 (44) |
| Inevitable stage of disease | 43 (21) | 45 (45) | 41 (41) | 63 (45) | 57 (38) |
| Effective treatment (improved glycemic control, fewer complications) | 42 (21) | 47 (47) | 49 (49) | 67 (48) | 67 (45) |
| Treatment with risk of weight gain | 32 (16) | 40 (40) | 43 (43) | 59 (42) | 51 (34) |
| Other | 11 (5) | 3 (3) | 2 (2) | 2 (1) | 3 (2) |
Notes: Data are n (%) of patients. Question b, dealing with recall of perceptions before and at initiation, is shown only for patients treated with insulin for ≤24 months to limit recall bias.
What ideas do you have about insulin therapy? [Several possible responses].
Specifically, what ideas did you have about insulin therapy? [Several possible responses].
Specifically, what are your perceptions of your insulin treatment today? [Several possible responses].
Current insulin-treatment duration.
Figure 1Patients’ current experiences vs previous perceptions of starting insulin therapy.
Notes: The question put to the 388 patients who received insulin therapy was “In hindsight and compared to what you imagined before this type of treatment, how does the experience of starting insulin appear to you globally?” Data were obtained for the three patient groups: 100 patients had received insulin for 2–24 months, 139 patients >2 to <6 years, and 149 patients ≥6 years.
Physicians’ perceptions of insulin therapy
| All physicians, n=130 | Diabetologists, endocrinologists, n=65 | General practitioners, n=65 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Effective treatment (improved glycemic control, fewer complications) | 70 (54) | 36 (55) | 34 (52) |
| Sign of disease progression | 55 (42) | 17 (26) | 38 (58) |
| More restrictive treatment (self-injection, increased risk of hypoglycemia, and need for self-monitoring of blood-glucose levels) | 49 (38) | 26 (40) | 23 (35) |
| Inevitable stage of disease | 39 (30) | 25 (38) | 14 (22) |
| Treatment with risk of hypoglycemia | 35 (27) | 22 (34) | 13 (20) |
| Treatment with risk of weight gain | 35 (27) | 20 (31) | 15 (23) |
| Flexible treatment with possibility of adapting dose according to patient’s needs | 28 (22) | 15 (23) | 13 (20) |
| Treatment with greater social impact (disease more difficult to conceal, social interactions and travel less frequent) | 24 (18) | 11 (17) | 13 (20) |
| The sign of a transition to true diabetes | 8 (6) | 3 (5) | 5 (8) |
| Other | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Notes: Question posed was “How would you rate the transition from oral glucose-lowering therapy to insulin therapy for a patient with Type 2 diabetes?” (Several possible answers). Data are n (%) of physicians.
Patients’ fears associated with starting insulin therapy
| Patients: your fears | Physicians: fears of your patients | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2–24 months, | All, n=130 | Diabetologists, endocrinologists, n=65 | General practitioners, n=65 | |
| Fear of complications related to the disease (amputation, blindness) | 44 (44) | 34 (26) | 19 (29) | 15 (23) |
| Fear of lifelong treatment | 36 (36) | 65 (50) | 31 (48) | 34 (52) |
| Fear of complications related to insulin (weight gain, hypoglycemia) | 42 (42) | 56 (43) | 35 (54) | 21 (32) |
| Feelings of failure with my past treatments/efforts | 25 (25) | 29 (22) | 15 (23) | 14 (22) |
| Fear of stinging and/or injecting myself | 21 (21) | 104 (80) | 50 (77) | 54 (83) |
| Fear of aggravation of disease | 17 (17) | 25 (19) | 16 (25) | 9 (14) |
| Other fears | 4 (4) | 5 (4) | 3 (5) | 2 (3) |
| No answer | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Notes: Questions were addressed to patients who had been receiving insulin therapy for ≤24 months and to physicians (several possible answers). Data are n (%) of patients/physicians.
What were your main fears?
What are the main fears of your patients starting insulin treatment?
Current insulin-treatment duration.
Wording used by physicians to describe insulin therapy at first mention
| Patients’ answers | Physicians’ answers | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2–24 months, | All, n=130 | Diabetologists, endocrinologists, n=65 | General practitioners, n=65 | |
| An inevitable option in view of the evolution of the disease | 47 (47) | 55 (42) | 25 (38) | 30 (46) |
| An option allowing better control of the disease, more effective than other treatments | 47 (47) | 92 (71) | 52 (80) | 40 (62) |
| A more adaptable/flexible treatment (dose adjustment to blood glucose) | 29 (29) | 26 (20) | 10 (15) | 16 (25) |
| A treatment option to consider one day | 28 (28) | 65 (50) | 38 (58) | 27 (42) |
| The next step of treatment | 11 (11) | 33 (25) | 18 (28) | 15 (23) |
| An option to postpone as late as possible | 15 (15) | 11 (8) | 3 (5) | 8 (12) |
| A sanction/threat in case of improper regularity of your medications | 4 (4) | 22 (17) | 8 (12) | 14 (22) |
| I do not remember | 1 (1) | NA | NA | NA |
Notes: Data are n (%) of patients or physicians.
Question addressed to patients who had been receiving insulin therapy for ≤24 months (several possible answers): “In what terms did your doctor tell you about insulin?”
Question addressed to physicians (several possible answers): “At first mention, what terms do you use to tell your patients about insulin?”
Current insulin-treatment duration.
Abbreviation: NA, not applicable.
Information delivered and difficulties encountered at time of insulin initiation
| General information about insulin | Pen manipulation | Adjustment of insulin doses | Live with on daily basis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| When insulin was prescribed to you, what elements were presented to you in one way or another? (several possible answers) | 97% | 95% | 92% | 66% |
| How would you judge the usefulness of this information at the beginning of the insulin treatment? Indicate which information you consider a priority (several possible answers) | 93% | 87% | 90% | 78% |
| In retrospect, what did you find most difficult when you started your treatment? (Several possible answers) | 62% | 57% | 73% | 57% |
Notes: Retrospectively reported by the 100 patients who initiated insulin 2–24 months before the survey.
Corresponded to at least one of the three following items: the reasons for switching to insulin, role of insulin and how it works, and blood-glucose targets you need to achieve.
Corresponded to at least one of the four following items: grip/presentation of pen; where to inject and when, injection sites and timing; how to carry out my injection/purge, injection time; and how to conserve my insulin/rules of conservation of insulin.
Corresponded to at least one of the four following items: how to perform blood-glucose monitoring with the pen and analyze the results, how to adapt my doses of insulin, what situations increase the risk of hypoglycemia, and what to do in case of hypoglycemia.
Corresponded to at least one of the three following items: what to do if you forget, impact on management of my physical activity, and impact on the management of my food.