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. 2011 Jan 20;5:65–72. doi: 10.2147/PPA.S16551

Table 2.

Patient requirements of health professionals and administrators

Requirements of health professionals Requirements of health administrators
  • Treatment should be individualized because each body and each person is different

  • Physicians should spend more time with patients and talk and express their opinions less

  • Nurses should show greater patience; controlling diabetes is not as easy as they think

  • Education should be continuous and talks and workshops should be continually organized

  • Patients should not be asked to do the impossible without bearing in mind their opinions and possibilities

  • Professionals should not lecture patients; patients are adults, know what they want, and should be respected

  • The public should not be given a catastrophic view of diabetes mellitus; this picture is harmful to patients socially and occupationally

  • Number of physicians and nurses should be increased

  • Position of case manager should be created in all hospitals to coordinate investigations in the least possible time and to consider the needs of each patient individually

  • Physicians should be changed less frequently because they never get to know the patient

  • Diabetes units should be created in primary health centers with specialized physicians and nurses

  • Necessary material should be provided with individualized follow-up of needs and use of materials

  • Processes should be simplified; modern computerized or technological systems and computerized prescriptions or magnetic cards should be introduced so that pharmacies can dispense all the material required at any time of day

  • Budgets should be controlled so that patients are not told that they cannot be given strips or that they have to monitor themselves less often

  • Research to cure diabetes or improve treatment and quality of life in affected individuals should be stimulated