科威特 2 型糖尿病患者的信息行为:一项基础理论研究。

IF 2 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL BMC primary care Pub Date : 2024-09-04 DOI:10.1186/s12875-024-02577-0
Zainab Meer, Ebaa Al-Ozairi, Genevie Fernandes, Sruthi Ranganathan, Jay Patel
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:与各国的流行病趋势相比,科威特的 2 型糖尿病患者人数要多得多。信息行为是确诊为 2 型糖尿病患者自我护理管理的重要组成部分,但这仍然是疾病管理中一个未得到充分研究的方面。本研究旨在调查科威特 2 型糖尿病患者的信息行为,并描述他们管理疾病的方法:这项定性研究采用了基础理论方法。在科威特的初级、中级和高级医疗机构,分三个阶段对 27 名参与者进行了半结构化访谈。此外,还进行了深入访谈,以详细了解这些参与者的信息行为。对访谈内容进行了适当的翻译、记录,并通过定性编码进行分析,以综合信息行为模式:研究结果表明,2 型糖尿病患者的生活经历了一系列发展和转变阶段,包括患者情绪状态的变化、生活方式和身份的重建,以及查找和使用信息方式的改变。慢性病患者的生活被视为一个动态和过渡的过程,在这一过程中,患者的信息行为在各个可识别的阶段不断发生变化。这种动态模式在参与者的行为需求、信息来源和信息搜索模式中得到了最突出的体现:结论:2 型糖尿病患者不断调整自己的信息行为,以相对可预测的模式优化自我病情管理。在更广泛的人群中加深对这些行为的了解,将有助于改善对糖尿病患者的临床护理。
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Information behaviours of people with type 2 diabetes in Kuwait: a grounded theory study.

Background: Relative to country-specific epidemiological trends, Kuwait experiences a far greater burden of type 2 diabetes among its population. Information behaviours form a significant component of self-care management for patients diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, however this remains an understudied aspect of disease management. This study aims to investigate the information behaviours of patients with type 2 diabetes in Kuwait, and characterise the methods employed to manage their disease.

Methods: This qualitative study employed a grounded theory method. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with twenty-seven participants over three phases of data collection in primary, secondary and tertiary healthcare settings across Kuwait. These were complemented by in-depth interviews to detail the information behaviours of these participants. The interviews were translated where appropriate, transcripts, and analysed through qualitative coding to synthesise the information behaviour patterns.

Results: The findings demonstrated that living with type 2 diabetes involved a range of developmental and transformative stages, including changes to the patients' emotional state, reconstruction of their lifestyle and identity, and changes in the ways they find and use information. Living with the chronic condition was viewed as a dynamic and transitional process, where patients' information behaviours continually changed throughout the process across various identifiable stages. This dynamic pattern was reflected most prominently across the participants' behavioural needs, sources and information-seeking patterns.

Conclusion: Patients with type 2 diabetes continuously adapted their information behaviours to optimise the self-management of their condition across a relatively predictable pattern. Greater understanding of these behaviours across a wider population would improve the provision of clinical care for patients with diabetes.

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