| Literature DB >> 35801247 |
R Turner Goins1, Molly K Grant1, Kathleen P Conte2, Lisa Lefler1.
Abstract
Objective: Greater understanding how relationships that can facilitate or impede type 2 diabetes (T2D) management and control among older American Indian people is an overlooked, yet urgently needed strategy. Thus, we examined social support among older American Indian people in relation to their T2D management.Entities:
Keywords: American Indians; in-depth individual interviews; older adults; social support; type 2 diabetes
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35801247 PMCID: PMC9253509 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.780851
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Interview questions.
| 1. How long have you had type 2 diabetes? |
| 2. What do you think about having diabetes? |
| 3. What is different between those who get diabetes and those who don't in the [tribe name removed]? |
| 4. What do you think caused your diabetes? |
| 5. How confident do you feel that you can successfully manage your diabetes on a scale from 1 to 10 with 1 representing no confidence and 10 representing the greatest confidence? |
| 6. How do you manage your diabetes on a daily basis? |
| 7. Overall, would you say that your diabetes is well-managed or poorly managed? |
| 8. Can you share a time when you knew your diabetes was not as well managed as it could be? |
| 9. What are the primary factors or reasons why you say your diabetes is well-managed/poorly managed? |
| 10. Among those who have diabetes in the tribe, what do those people with well-managed/poorly managed diabetes do differently than you? |
| 11. Who helps you with your diabetes? |
| 12. What is the value in managing your diabetes well? |
| 13. What are the consequences of not managing your diabetes well? |
| 14. How do your feelings, such as feeling down, or tired, or out of energy, affect your ability to manage your diabetes? |
| 15. What is it that you wish others understood about your diabetes? |
| 16. Is there anything you need that you don't already have to better manage your diabetes? |
| 17. Other than what the doctor has told you and what you have learned from experience, is there a [tribe name removed] way to deal with your diabetes? |
| 18. In general, what are the factors that you believe that contribute to good diabetes control? |
| 19. Are there any other thoughts you have about your diabetes and your ability manage it that you would like to share? |
Exemplar quotes by support source.
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| I need to extend my walking some, but we would go down this, way, and down that way, and over through the field, and back around. We try to do that every evening. My husband and I. [F07]. | We just started eating less. She obviously cut back on the–when she bakes a cake she cuts back–she don't put as much sweetening in it. She makes more of a diabetic cake when she does it because she herself don't like too much sweetness. [M09]. |
| My daughter takes care of the shots and my pills. She does all of that for me. [F18]. | As I say, my oldest daughter, she was a nurse and she tells us things to do. She writes down things that I should do as a diabetic. My wife goes along with that and tells me, “Your own daughter knows that you've got the diabetes and she's trying to help you.” [M12]. |
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| This (tribe senior center) is my day-to-day social interaction with people my own age and it's always positive. I grew up here as a child so most of these people I've known all my life and they keep me informed of what's going on in the community because where I live…we visit and talk and we're just glad to see each other every day. [F26]. | Yeah—it's very cost-effective…If you can just go to the (tribal) hospital up there and say; look, I need some lancets and I need some strips and blah, blah, blah. [M32]. |
| We have a nurse who comes around fills our pill box [F24]. | Well, the tribe diabetes clinic, they kind of help me manage and control my diabetes [M27]. |
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| Conditioning. I come from an old traditional family. In fact, we were discussing that yesterday. My Indian grandparents didn't speak English. He was a tribal medicine man. So I grew up with a lot of herbs, the teas, the practices and just growing up you keep them, you maintain them, which is what the four older ones of us did because we were raised mainly in that atmosphere where you didn't fry potatoes [F30]. | The tribe come up here about a month ago with – they was about 15 to 20 people. It was time for the mower to come and mow, but they beat the mower to it. There was about five of them had weed eaters and they started way down there at the garden, come up here weed eating…and done all the weed eating. I had some rocks laying back here behind the house. We told them that. They got it and they made flower beds… They fixed the front of the house right along through here. They just done everything and we appreciated it [M12]. |
| And they are always harping about eating the right things, and then they'll have all these Indian dinners served for benefits, and there's always the wrong type of food to eat [F07]. | I mean, if you're a member of a society like our society, like Cherokee, you're not as much as maybe a suburban city or some people in the outside world are not as concerned as what we are about thinking about not just ourselves but our family, our community, the whole society [M29]. |
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| I can get down, but then always God reminds me in a gentle voice, sometimes a little bit stern, now you just stop it. Just stop it. You've got to keep moving. Keep moving [F18]. | I was bad before I got saved and got into church [M14]. |
| So, it's (church) another community, but it's a familiar community and so all of that really takes up most of my days, most of time [F26]. | I think that God gives the doctors knowledge to keep us going, and if we don't take that treatment the doctor prescribed for us, it's like saying, “God, you don't know what you're talking about.” [M37]. |
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| I have to do it (exercise) by myself [F22]. | Maybe more encouragement from my healthcare providers and from family members–they don't always encourage each other like we should. Sometimes you don't know how to encourage somebody. [M09] |
| They can get it at the dialysis center, but they don't have any support when they get home because when they get home it's fixed the way that they're not supposed to have it [F30]. | No–not on diabetes. I don't know if we've really took it seriously enough to dedicate a certain part of the time for a men's group to get together and discuss and help support each other [M09]. |
Exemplar quotes by types of social support.
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| I have a sister that has it, and we visit, and talk about it [F08]. | She gets upset when I don't exercise [M37]. |
| My daughter-in-law will help; she's always cooking something and wanting me to eat with her [F34]. | I belong to the Legion and we have a little meeting on Thursday mornings. A bunch of us if we go there sometimes and we eat. It's a monthly meeting for all the Legionnaires but on Thursday it used to be a gab session [M25]. |
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| Yeah, I like her (physician). She takes good care of me [F26]. | Well, like I said–there again, I go back to my wife. She was a diabetic teacher. And she sort of fixes meals that line up with that [M14]. |
| My husband got me things (Indian medicine) the first time and it kept it down, but like I said, I hate to deplete the plants, because you have to take it all the time, too [F10]. | My wife doles out my pills, so I take those religiously. I haven't missed a single one. She, as I mentioned, checks my blood sugar level [M29]. |
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| That's when I smoked and the doctor told me, not a cigarette–he said, “How much you smoke?” And I said, one a day. He said, “No more.” Okay. I never picked up another cigarette [F11]. | My step daughter's beginning to notice that. She said, “Dad, better wake up. Better move around. Quit sitting in one place” [M23]. |
| I had gone to the hospital, I had an appointment with the nutritionist and we talked and everything...we had a really long discussion, about diabetes, you know, and the effects, and everything about it. And, nobody had ever told me anything like that before…Oh, yeah, it was really helpful [F34]. | As I said, being familiar with that, I still didn't go until finally my wife made me go to one of my specialists [M29]. |
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| My mom had it, and so she was real bad. So I was scared to death to have it. But it hasn't been–if you watch what you eat [F08]. | There's tingling and burning in your feet. That still concerns me but I got my confidence somewhat from my mother. She'd been on 1–2 shots a day for 15 years. She changed her living habits and her eating habits and she came completely off of them after 15 years. So I know that I can do it if I've just got the will power. I was inspired by her...I guess that was what started the hope that if you have the dream don't let nobody take it away from you [M09]. |
| Well, my brother, like I said, his really gets him down. But they told him that he was going to have to go on dialysis and this was about maybe 8 years ago. And he's like, he's not gonna take this route. So he's real strict on his diet and does the carb count and this and that and whatever. And he's managed to stay off the dialysis and he's still alive so I can see the benefits of being really strict with yourself and watching your diet. I can see a positive there, as far as he's concerned [F31]. | I had in church, prayer meetings we called it, with people...and we've run into differents of places that people didn't have legs. They smoke. They do everything. They don't eat right. They don't take care of themselves. I mean, I see this, you know, myself. But when we went into these houses, I seen this one lady, she was in the hospital bed, with–we didn't even know that she was in this shape when they asked us to come to their house and have prayer meeting. Her legs, both legs, was amputated...You can see for yourself that it's not good [M12]. |
Intersection of social support sources and types.
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| Family/Friends | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Clinicians/Formal Services | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Community/Culture | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Spiritual/God | ✓ | ✓ |