Abstract
Introduction
Clinician-led diabetes education is a fundamental component of care to assist people with Type 1 diabetes (T1D) self-manage their disease. Recent initiatives to incorporate a more patient-centered approach to diabetes education have included recommendations to make such education more individualized. Yet there is a dearth of research that identifies patients’ perceptions of clinician-led diabetes education. We aimed to describe the experience of diabetes education from the perspective of young adults with T1D.
Methods
We designed a self-reported survey for Australian adults, aged 18–35 years, with T1D. Participants (n = 150) were recruited by advertisements through diabetes consumer-organizations. Respondents were asked to rate aspects of clinician-led diabetes education and identify sources of self-education. To expand on the results of the survey we interviewed 33 respondents in focus groups.
Results
Survey: The majority of respondents (56.0%) were satisfied with the amount of continuing clinician-led diabetes education; 96.7% sought further self-education; 73.3% sourced more diabetes education themselves than that provided by their clinicians; 80.7% referred to diabetes organization websites for further education; and 30.0% used online chat-rooms and blogs for education. Focus groups: The three key themes that emerged from the interview data were deficiencies related to the pedagogy of diabetes education; knowledge deficiencies arising from the gap between theoretical diabetes education and practical reality; and the need for and problems associated with autonomous and peer-led diabetes education.
Conclusion
Our findings indicate that there are opportunities to improve clinician led-diabetes education to improve patient outcomes by enhancing autonomous health-literacy skills and to incorporate peer-led diabetes education and support with clinician-led education. The results provide evidence for the potential value of patient engagement in quality improvement and health-service redesign.
Electronic supplementary material
The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s13300-014-0056-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Keywords: Diabetes education, Endocrinology, Patient-centered care, Patient education, Patient perspective, Qualitative research, Type 1 diabetes, Young adults
Introduction
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is an autoimmune disease that necessitates lifelong insulin replacement therapy. Effective self-management of T1D has evolved to require patients to have an ability to formulate algorithms for insulin replacement dependent upon a complex array of interactive physiological parameters [1]. These parameters include consideration for dietary carbohydrate content and metabolism [2–5], personal glycemic patterns [6, 7], and adjustment for situations such as exercise or sick days [8]. Although tight glycemic control has been shown to delay or prevent the onset of diabetes-related micro-vascular and macro-vascular complications [9–12], the complexity of self-management has meant that the majority of people with T1D fail to maintain recommended levels of glycemic control [13–15]. Thus, the long-term prognosis for a person with T1D remains poor [16].
Diabetes education is a complex clinical intervention that provides the person with the knowledge and skills needed to perform diabetes self-care and make lifestyle changes to successfully manage the disease [17, 18]. As it has been estimated that 95% of diabetes care is self-management [19], clinician-led diabetes education is a fundamental component of assistance for people with T1D [20]. Clinical guidelines for the management of T1D recommend that diabetes education be provided to the patient by the diabetes health care team at diagnosis and at regular intervals throughout the patient journey [21–23]. Traditionally clinicians, who may include endocrinologists, diabetes educators (accredited diabetes nurse specialists), dietitians, or general practitioners (GP), have delivered diabetes education in a one-on-one situation with the patient. Evidence suggests that such education may be unstructured and provide inadequate knowledge to promote effective self-management [24]. National diabetes educator accreditation has been implemented in many countries to maintain higher standards of diabetes education [25–29]. However, there remains limited understanding of factors that may act as barriers or enablers to effective self-management knowledge translation [18, 30].
As health systems move toward more patient-centered systems of care, the pedagogy of diabetes education has developed to emphasize patient autonomy and consideration for patient lifestyle preferences [31, 32]. Research has supported this transformation [33–35]. A recent development has been the move to conduct structured group diabetes education courses [1, 18]. A theoretical basis in Social Learning Theory, which emphasizes skills attainment through observation, imitation, and modeling, has driven this development [36]. One internationally prominent course is the Dose Adjustment for Normal Eating (DAFNE) program [37] available in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, Singapore, and Kuwait [1, 13, 37, 38]. The course evolved from the German Structured Teaching and Treatment Programme [39]. Within those countries that have adopted the DAFNE course there are no published data available that quantify the uptake of the program by suitable participants. It is now suggested that graduates of the DAFNE course would benefit from individualized follow up from suitably trained clinicians on an ‘as needs’ basis [40]. Such follow-up recommendations coincide with the American Diabetes Educators Association position statement call for diabetes education to be more ‘individualized’ [41].
In order to implement diabetes education that is tailored to the individual, clinicians need to identify issues that people with T1D perceive as enablers or barriers for effective diabetes education. Yet there are few studies that seek to understand, from the patient’s perspective, the factors that impact on this process. Whilst the DAFNE group has undertaken qualitative research with the graduates of that course [42], there are no peer-reviewed published data on the perspectives of adults with T1D that have not undertaken specific structured education programs. This study seeks to address the research gap.
Young adults with T1D are of particular interest as they are recognized as being more technologically experienced [43, 44], but have high attrition rates from diabetes health services [45, 46] and suffer worse health outcomes [45]. In order to attract young adults to take up recommended health services, there is a strong imperative to make those services more patient-centered; that is that the services meet the patients’ needs and preferences. This study aims to identify the aspects of diabetes education that young adults consider could be more comprehensively addressed, thereby enhancing their autonomy and confidence in diabetes self-management. We set out to determine young adult’s perceptions and experiences of clinician-led diabetes education and to identify other ways in which they gained knowledge to manage their diabetes.
Methods
Study Population
The study population was a sample of Australian adults, aged 18–35 years, with T1D. Participants were recruited in 2011 from Australian diabetes consumer support organizations via advertisements on websites, e-newsletters, Facebook, and print journals. To obtain qualitative data, focus groups were conducted in all state capital cities excepting Hobart with some participants traveling from regional areas. Focus groups were not conducted in Hobart due to the low response rate, which reflects the population size of the smallest state capital in Australia. Age-limited inclusion criteria for the study were established for the reasons previously described [43–46]. Exclusion criteria were people with T1D outside of the set age limits, people with T1D not living in Australia, and carers of those with T1D.
The University of New South Wales granted ethics approval: HREC 10395.
All procedures followed were in accordance with the ethical standards of the responsible committee on human experimentation (institutional and national) and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2000 and 2008. Informed consent was obtained from all patients for being included in the study.
Study Design
The study design involved a mixed methods approach to survey and sought the perspectives of a defined population.
Survey
The quantitative component of the study consisted of a web-based, self-reported, cross-sectional survey of methods of diabetes self-management. The survey was available online from February to May 2011. A paper version of the survey was available but not utilized by any respondent. The survey consisted of 96 questions that covered a comprehensive assessment of factors relevant to T1D self-management although not all questions were relevant to every respondent. For example, questions related to the use of continuous insulin infusion devices were not relevant to respondents who used multiple daily injections. The survey was piloted on a sample of four young adults with T1D and ten health-services workers and researchers. Recommended improvements were incorporated into the final version of the survey.
Following assessment of respondent demographic characteristics, the survey addressed questions related to mode, frequency, and evaluation of insulin delivery and blood glucose monitoring systems. The survey also explored respondents’ record keeping, dietary management; insulin adjustment and the use of blood glucose target levels (including for exercise, sick days, and alcohol consumption), identification and evaluation of health services, and diabetes education accessed.
Participants were asked to nominate from whom they received their initial diabetes education. They were asked to rate, using a seven point Likert scale, whether they had been adequately educated on nominated aspects of diabetes self-management, whether they were confident to manage those aspects of their diabetes care, and whether they sourced more diabetes education themselves than their health team provided. Participants were asked to nominate the sources that they referred to for further diabetes education.
Focus Groups
To expand on the results of the survey, participants were invited by email to attend focus groups. This method was chosen as focus groups can promote participants’ interactions in ways that may not come to light in personal interviews [47]. Focus groups were conducted from May to August 2011. Sixty-eight respondents expressed interest in attending the focus groups, but only 33 were available for the organized dates and venues. Six focus groups were conducted with a range of three to seven participants.
One researcher (JW) conducted all focus groups using a semi-structured format of open-ended questions. The open-ended questions allowed for the exploration of the participants’ experiences of diabetes education beyond those considered in the survey questions. Focus group discussion continued until content saturation was achieved. Focus groups were electronically recorded and transcribed verbatim. The researcher wrote notes after each meeting, reflecting on the principal matters discussed and recording the perceived feelings, emotions, and personal interactions of the participants.
Data Processing and Analysis
Of 167 commenced survey responses, 150 respondents completed all relevant survey questions. Only completed responses were incorporated into the data analyses. For the purpose of reporting questions that were rated on the seven-point Likert scale, the three levels of agreement and of disagreement were combined, with the neutral score remaining constant. Quantitative analysis was undertaken using SPSS® (Version 20.0, SPSS Inc., Chicago, USA). Sections of the survey also provided for free text responses. These responses were incorporated with the qualitative data generated by the focus groups.
Qualitative data analysis was broadly interpretative, as we wanted to focus on health system applications, in areas identified by the focus group attendees that would improve the quality of diabetes education. To do this, we drew on the inductive analytic approach of interpretive description [48] whose tradition is based on seeking opportunity for real world applications for health service improvement. Two health services researchers, a registered nurse (JL), and a registered medical practitioner (JW) with clinical experience in diabetes care independently analyzed the data. Data were coded into recurring themes and sub-themes related to participants’ experiences of diabetes education with the aid of qualitative research software, QRS NVivo (Version 9.0, QSR International Pty Ltd, Australia). A third health services researcher (MW) analyzed the quantitative and qualitative data to check for thematic consistency and interpretative analysis.
Qualitative studies such as this one collect large amounts of data from a small number of informants or study sites. They are not designed to estimate proportions in a wider population, quantify relationships between pre-determined variables, or provide a single representative or average view or opinion. Instead, they seek to document and explain the variation in a wide range of views, needs, values, practices, and beliefs.
Results
Survey Results
Demographic Characteristics of the Survey Respondents
The sample participants had the following characteristics: 30.5% were aged 18–24 years, 34.4% were 25–29 years and 35.1% were 30–35 years; 79.5% of respondents were females; 80.0% came from eastern seaboard states (reflecting Australian population demographics); 68.0% were living in major cities; 79.0% had attained an education level of tertiary or higher, 64.0% were working full time, 10.0% were working part time, 13.0% were studying, 5.0% were not employed, and 8.0% combined a variety of roles, and 84.0% had private health insurance.
Diabetes Characteristics of the Survey Respondents
Clinical diabetes characteristics were self-reported and are listed in Table 1. Ten percent of respondents owned continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) devices and 18.5% had CGM preformed intermittently. To deliver insulin, 40.4% of respondents used a continuous insulin infusion device. Of the 90 respondents who used a subcutaneous insulin injection method, 5.6% had 1–3 daily injections, 57.3% had 4 daily injections, and 37.1% had more than 4 injections per day.
Table 1.
Duration of diabetes in years | |
<5 | 38 (25.3%) |
5–10 | 30 (20.0%) |
11–15 | 23 (15.3%) |
16–20 | 26 (17.3%) |
>20 | 33 (22.0%) |
Last HbA1c | |
Don’t know | 6 (4.0%) |
<7% | 51 (34.0%) |
7.1–7.5% | 30 (20.0%) |
7.6–8% | 18 (12.0%) |
8.1–8.5% | 21 (14.0%) |
8.6–9% | 9 (6.0%) |
>9% | 15 (10.0%) |
HbA and HbA1c performed in the past 6 months | |
Yes | 135 (90.0%) |
No | 15 (10.0%) |
BMI | |
Don’t know | 34 (22.7%) |
<19 | 5 (3.3%) |
19–24 | 67 (44.7%) |
25–30 | 33 (22.0%) |
>30 | 11 (7.3%) |
BMI body mass index, HbA glycated hemoglobin A, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin A1c
Consultation Characteristics of the Survey Respondents
The numbers of respondents who currently consulted with recommended clinicians were endocrinologists, 135 (90.0%); diabetes educators, 89 (59.3%); dieticians, 50 (33.3%); psychologist/psychiatrist/social worker 34 (22.7%); and GPs, 56 (37.3%). Four respondents (2.7%) did not currently consult any clinician. The average number of clinicians that respondents consulted to assist with self-management was 2.3.
Diabetes Education Characteristics of the Sample
At initial diabetes diagnosis 112 (74.7%) of all respondents or their family members received diabetes education from an endocrinologist or specialist physician, 116 (77.3%) from a diabetes educator, 87 (58.0%) from a dietician, and 40 (26.7%) from a GP. Due to age at diagnosis, three (2%) respondents were not aware of whether any initial diabetes education was provided.
Fifty-six percent of respondents were satisfied with the amount of continuing diabetes education that they received from their health care team, 76.6% were confident about how to calculate bolus insulin requirements for meals, 64.0% were confident about how to calculate basal insulin requirements, 66.0% agreed that it had been adequately explained to them how to manage their diabetes when sick, 66.7% agreed that it had been adequately explained to them how to manage their diabetes when exercising, and 76.7% agreed that the effect that alcohol had on their diabetes had been adequately explained to them. Respondent results for complete Likert scale ratings for questions related to diabetes education are listed in Table 2.
Table 2.
Survey item | Disagree | Neutral | Agree | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
I am happy with the amount of continuing diabetes education I receive from my healthcare team | 19 (12.7%) | 13 (8.7%) | 10 (6.7%) | 24 (16.0%) | 15 (10.0%) | 26 (17.3%) | 43 (28.7%) |
I feel confident about how to calculate my insulin requirement for meals | 9 (6.0%) | 9 (6.0%) | 10 (6.7%) | 7 (4.7%) | 20 (13.3%) | 48 (32.0%) | 47 (31.3%) |
I feel confident about how to calculate my basal insulin requirement | 13 (8.7%) | 9 (6.0%) | 13 (8.7%) | 19 (12.6%) | 22 (14.7%) | 32 (21.3%) | 42 (28.0%) |
I understand how to use a correction factor (the adjustment of the pre-meal dose of insulin dependent upon the pre-meal BSL) | 15 (10.0%) | 4 (2.7%) | 7 (4.7%) | 10 (6.7%) | 19 (12.7%) | 34 (22.7%) | 61 (40.7%) |
My health care team has adequately explained to me how to manage my diabetes when I am sick | 10 (6.7%) | 8 (5.3%) | 10 (6.7%) | 23 (15.3%) | 17 (11.3%) | 27 (18.0%) | 55 (36.7%) |
I feel confident about managing my sick days | 10 (6.7%) | 5 (3.3%) | 13 (8.0%) | 12 (8.0%) | 30 (20.0%) | 35 (23.3%) | 45 (30.0%) |
My health care team has adequately explained to me how to manage my diabetes when I am exercising | 18 (12.0%) | 10 (6.7%) | 9 (6.0%) | 13 (8.7%) | 25 (16.7%) | 38 (25.3%) | 37 (24.7%) |
I am confident about managing my diabetes when I am exercising | 16 (10.7%) | 12 (8.0%) | 15 (10.0%) | 12 (8.0%) | 33 (22.0%) | 29 (19.3%) | 33 (22.0%) |
My health are team has adequately explained to me the effect that alcohol has on my diabetes | 14 (9.3%) | 3 (2.0%) | 4 (2.7%) | 14 (9.3%) | 25 (16.7%) | 39 (26.0%) | 51 (34.0%) |
I understand the effect that alcohol has on my diabetes | 10 (6.7%) | 9 (6.0%) | 4 (2.7%) | 11 (7.3%) | 24 (16.0%) | 30 (20.0%) | 62 (41.3%) |
I source more diabetes education myself than what the health care team provides for me | 5 (3.3%) | 8 (5.3%) | 11 (7.3%) | 16 (10.7%) | 26 (17.3%) | 17 (11.3%) | 67 (44.6%) |
To estimate insulin requirements for food consumption, respondents used a variety of methods concurrently: 122 (81.3%) counted carbohydrate content, 38 (25.3%) used an exchange method, 28 (18.7%) considered the glycemic index of the food, and 97 (64.7%) generally used past experience for how much insulin to administer. Sixty-eight respondents (45.3%) stated that they had been educated on the recommended daily requirements of different food groups while 81 (54%) had been educated about the use of glycemic index.
One hundred and forty-five (96.6%) of the respondents’ accessed further diabetes education resources themselves and 110 (73.3%) of respondents stated that they sourced more diabetes information themselves than the overall amount of information that was provided by their health care team diabetes education. The diabetes education resource that respondents referred to the most was diabetes support organization websites at 80.7%. The self-education resources that our respondents utilized are listed in Table 3.
Table 3.
Resource | Result |
---|---|
Diabetes support organization websites | 121 (80.7%) |
Diabetes support organization magazines | 99 (66.0%) |
Books | 68 (45.3%) |
Medical technology company websites | 64 (42.7%) |
Diabetes support organization chat-rooms/blogs | 45 (30%) |
Other websites | 44 (29.3%) |
Diabetes support organization seminars | 30 (20.0%) |
I do not access further education | 5 (3.3%) |
Focus Groups
Characteristics of Focus Group Participants
These were a sub-set of the Survey participants. Twenty-seven females (81.8%) and six males (18.1%) attended the focus groups. All participants came from major or regional cities. Their mean age was 25.1 years with a range from 20 to 33 years. The mean duration of T1D was 10.5 years with a range of duration from 0.5 to 25 years. Seven participants (21.2%) used continuous insulin infusion devices. One participant (3.0%) had previously used such a device but had reverted to multiple daily injections. Two participants (6.1%) identified as [TOB: female age 31, T1D mellitus (T1D) duration 20 years] and [SAB: female age 24, T1D duration 18 years] had attended the Dose Adjustment for Normal Eating (DAFNE) course. One participant identified as [HEP: female age 28, T1D duration 2 years] had attended another type of structured re-education program when she was previously a resident in the United Kingdom.
Focus Group Results
Following thematic analysis of the qualitative data, three key themes emerged that reflected the commonly shared experiences of many participants. These themes were summarized as follows: deficiencies in the pedagogy of diabetes education; knowledge deficiencies arising from the gap between theoretical diabetes education and practical reality; and the problems associated with autonomous and peer-led diabetes education and the need for more such education. Table 4 shows the hierarchy of the themes and sub-themes identified in the thematic analysis.
Table 4.
Corresponding table | Overarching theme | Subtheme |
---|---|---|
5 | Deficiencies in the pedagogy of diabetes education | Impact of age at initial diabetes education |
Diabetes knowledge deficiencies not identified in continuing education | ||
Failure of clinicians to refer to comprehensive structured education programs | ||
Pedagogy did not promote autonomous learning | ||
Variation in personal motivation towards education | ||
Failure of clinicians to refer to new technologies | ||
6 | The gap between theoretical diabetes self-management education and practical reality | Unpredictable variation in glycemic response |
The provision of conflicting advice by clinicians | ||
The impact of inflexible self-management regimen education | ||
7 | Peer-led and autonomous diabetes education | The value of peer-led learning |
Taboo subjects in clinician-led education | ||
Diabetes consumer organization-led learning |
Deficiencies in the Pedagogy of Diabetes Education
Participants reported that there were deficiencies related to the pedagogy of diabetes education. The reported deficiencies varied by the age of the participant at diabetes diagnosis and reflected their initial experience of diabetes education. Reported deficiencies also related to the teaching methods employed by clinicians. A lack of utilization of problem-based learning and failure to encourage autonomous learning were reported. Reliance by clinicians on piecemeal diabetes educational updates rather than provision of a comprehensive re-education program was perceived by participants as a cause in the development of knowledge gaps in the understanding of diabetes management. Participants identified contextual factors that promoted diabetes learning. Participants reported the failure by some clinicians to promote independent established structured diabetes education programs and information about new technologies that assisted self-management. Relevant participant quotations for these subthemes are reported in Table 5.
Table 5.
Quote number | Quotation |
---|---|
1.1 Impact of age at initial diabetes education | |
1 | “I was seven when I was diagnosed. My parents were educated, not me. This has been problematic as I feel as though I was never properly educated.” [DOS: female, age 32, T1DM duration 25 years] |
2 |
“When I was first diagnosed they told my parents what could happen … They didn’t tell me. It was mainly a parent sort of thing Whereas, all of a sudden, I was then supposed to know about it! I was too young to take it in initially and they didn’t tell me again … They just assume that you know it when you are 18 or 19.” [TOB: female, age 31, T1D duration 20 years] |
3 | “I never got educated … my parents were the ones that were educated.” [SUM: female, age 31, T1D duration 21 years] |
4 | “I was overwhelmed with the information that they gave me: now I’m not even sure what the complications are.” [DAS: female, age 32, T1D duration 2 years] |
1.2 Diabetes knowledge deficiencies not identified in continuing education | |
5 | “My knowledge is probably really archaic because it has never been updated. It is just what I have gathered. … It’s probably not the best knowledge at all but it’s just sort of been gathered knowledge.” [SUM: female, age 31, T1D duration 21 years] |
6 | “I was (adjusting insulin) off instinct. No it’s like guesswork. … I’d never actually been educated. My parents were educated when I was six years old and I mean my parents are busy and I like literally just used guesswork over the years. So I’ve only really had DAFNE.” [SAB: female, age 24, T1D duration 18 years] |
1.3 Failure of clinicians to refer to structured education programs | |
7 | “I don’t know anything about DAFNE. Because I’ve been handling it fine he (the endocrinologist) doesn’t offer anything.” [NIB: female, age 26, T1D duration 2 years] |
1.4 Pedagogy did not promote autonomous learning | |
8 | “Maybe if I was encouraged when I was younger to look for the information or if the resources were given to me or made available, then I would have learnt a lot more from a younger age. …The emphasis on giving the skills to be more autonomous … I don’t think that has been good.” [AMS: female, age 23, T1D duration 11 years] |
9 | “Being educated on how to educate yourself would be a lifesaver.” [RAS: female, age 30, T1D duration 12 years] |
1.5 Variation in personal motivation towards education | |
10 | “Since I’ve graduated from high school … all of a sudden I have grown up a lot more and I’m a lot more interested and a lot more responsible.” [SAB: female, age 24, T1D duration 18 years] |
1.6 Failure of clinicians to refer to new technologies | |
11 | “I find that doctors don’t know much about pumps. So they don’t want to put someone on one because they are not going to be able to help them. … Both times (for Continuous Glucose Monitoring also) I went to the endocrinologist and said ‘I want to do this’.” [MOM: female, age 33, T1D duration 13 years] |
DAFNE Dose Adjustment for Normal Eating; T1D type 1 diabetes
Impact of Age at Initial Diabetes Education
Participants’ experiences of their initial diabetes education differed dependent upon their age at diabetes diagnosis. Two distinct group experiences emerged: those whose parents had primarily been educated by clinicians due to the patient’s young age at diagnosis and those who had been the primary recipient of clinician-led education. Participants, whose diabetes was diagnosed at an age when their parents were responsible for their diabetes management, reported that the majority of diabetes education had been directed towards their parents rather than them. This became problematic for the participant at an age when they were required to become autonomous for their diabetes management, as the initial intensive clinician-led diabetes education provided to the parent was never repeated for the participant (Quotation 1).
Participants, whose parents were the primary recipients of clinician-led education, reported that there was an underlying assumption by clinicians that they would have acquired the diabetes knowledge imparted to their parents (Quotation 2).
However, in many instances the parent had not imparted comprehensive diabetes knowledge to their child. Although participants were provided with intermittent or piecemeal clinician-led diabetes education, they were not provided with a comprehensive diabetes education. This led to gaps in participants’ knowledge. So large were these knowledge gaps that some participants expressed that they felt they had never been educated (Quotation 3).
Alternately participants, diagnosed at an age when they were the primary recipients of the clinician-led diabetes education, reported that the intensive nature of the initial diabetes education sessions, which occurred at the time when they were dealing with the psychological impact of their recent diagnosis, left them feeling overwhelmed. The timing of the comprehensive education was not conducive to knowledge retention and not repeated at a later stage (Quotation 4).
Diabetes Knowledge Deficiencies Not Identified in Continuing Education
Participants commented that clinician-led continuing education tended to be piecemeal without consideration being given to possible gaps in attendees’ overall knowledge. For most participants, even those diagnosed in their adolescence or adulthood, a comprehensive re-education program had never been offered. This left many participants feeling that their education was deficient overall (Quotation 5). The two participants who had completed the DAFNE course expressed that part of the value of the course lay in the fact that it was their first exposure to a comprehensive structured education program since their initial diagnosis or ever (Quotation 6).
Failure of Clinicians to Refer to Comprehensive Structured Education Programs
For a number of participants, the focus group interaction provided them, for the first time, with knowledge about the DAFNE course. Some participants perceived that there was not sufficient impetus on the part of clinicians to be proactive in directing their patients to ancillary education programs. Some participants reported clinician-based inertia toward encouragement for ancillary diabetes education. Participants reported that they believed that maintenance of an acceptable level of glycemic control heightened such clinical inertia (Quotation 7).
Pedagogy Did Not Promote Autonomous Learning
Participants reported that diabetes education tended to be structurally didactic and did not provide for the development of skills for autonomous diabetes learning. Participants expressed the need for skills that focused on problem-based learning and that encouraged autonomous learning to be incorporated into diabetes education programs (Quotations 8 and 9).
Variation in Personal Motivation Toward Education
Participants reported that their interest in and retention of diabetes education had varied over the duration of their diabetes. Interest toward diabetes education was affected by contextual factors. Some participants reported that the onset of diabetes complications created an impetus to seek further education whilst others reported that the transition stage from adolescence to young adulthood, with the concomitant requirement for self-management autonomy, created a driver for further diabetes education (Quotation 10).
Failure of Clinicians to Refer to New Technologies
Many participants had experienced clinician-based inertia in relation to the education around new technological advances. Participants reported that clinicians appeared to make a decision to educate patients about new technologies dependent upon whether the clinician intended to recommend those technologies in the management regimen rather than for patients’ broader education. This was problematic as many participants reported that clinicians were ‘technophobic’ and, therefore, education related to the use of new technologies was patient instigated (Quotation 11).
The Gap Between Theoretical Diabetes Self-Management Education and Practical Reality
Participants reported a noticeable disjuncture between their theoretical education regarding diabetes self-management: the ‘textbook stuff’, and the practical reality of implementing that theoretical knowledge. This disjuncture was most obvious when participants believed that they had implemented treatment regimens as agreed with clinicians, but the anticipated glycemic outcomes had not occurred. Participants questioned whether diabetes physiology was sufficiently understood such that clinicians’ could anticipate predicted responses. They reported that it would be helpful for clinicians to acknowledge gaps in scientific understanding. Participants reported that they frequently encountered variable glycemic responses in relation to mixed food meals and exercise. The experienced variation in glycemic response to treatment regimens acted as a basis for the provision of inconsistent advice from multi-disciplinary clinicians. The provision of inconsistent advice was a commonly reported feature that affected participants continuing diabetes knowledge translation. Some participants were able to adapt to the provision of inconsistent advice and use it to their own advantage while for others it acted as a driver away from health service utilization. Participants reported that the disjuncture occurred most obviously when knowledge translation did not provide for flexibility to make real-world patient choices. Relevant participant quotations for these subthemes are reported in Table 6.
Table 6.
Quote number | Quotation |
---|---|
2.1 Unpredictable variation in glycemic response | |
12 | “That is the really frustrating thing about diabetes. I find that everyone is so different and even within yourself you vary.” [NIM: male age 25 T1D duration 6 years] |
13 | “It is hard because there are no rules and stuff. Which makes it hard for doctors.” [CHS: male, age 32, T1D duration 9 years] |
14 | “It’s a complicated thing. That needs to be the message to be put out there. … It would be very helpful if people could get that.” [DOS: female, age 32, T1D duration 25 years] |
15 | “All my dietary information has come from me personally researching the information. No medical professional has helped me in this regard. Even JDRF has limited resources in this area.” [MAS: female, age 23, T1D duration 13 years] |
16 | “Working out regimens for exercise is something I do in my spare time.” [DAP: female, age 24, T1D duration 5 years] |
17 | “No matter what they tell you they can never know. Like even I don’t know when I’ve had it for years now. It is always different, always different, never the same.” [CAP: female, age 21, T1D duration 17 years] |
2.2 The provision of conflicting advice by clinicians | |
18 | “Yeah I definitely get mixed messages. She thinks this and he thinks that and I take them all in and go ‘Well what do I think and what would work for me? And I trial and error them all.” [MAP: female, age 24, T1D duration 2 years] |
19 | “It is better that they tell you a heap of stuff and you just listen to what you want to and then adapt it for you. I’ve had about 50 different doctors and I know what works for me and if they try and tell me stuff I just say ‘Yes’ but then I don’t do it because I know how I work and I know how to do it better than they do.” [CAP: female, age 21, T1D duration 17 years] |
20 | “It is really hard because I don’t know who to listen to. There is me, and what I want. But then I feel I should be doing what the doctor tells you to do. But then I go, ‘Hang on, they don’t actually know what they are taking about!’” [HEP: female, age 28, T1D duration 2 years] |
21 | “I don’t even tend to ask them anymore. I either do it myself or look it up online.” [RAP: female, age 25, T1D duration 3 years] |
2.3 The impact of inflexible self-management regimen education | |
22 | “It is really difficult when the dietician says you must eat this or that. In the real world on any given day you may or may not be able to make choices so although there is a best-case scenario that you should follow, the reality is that you can’t. You can only make the best possible choices in any situation. I don’t think that type of information can be translated or given to someone.” [DAP: male, age 24, T1D duration 5 years] |
JDRF Juvenile Diabetes research Foundation, T1D type 1 diabetes
Unpredictable Variation in Glycemic Response
Many participants, particularly those with diabetes of long standing duration, reported that the disjuncture between theoretical education and the lived experience of glycemic control created a source of constant frustration. Participants reported that although they may have followed the theoretical implementation of a treatment regimen, the anticipated response was not as they had been advised would occur and might vary for any given day even when the apparent theoretical variables remained constant (Quotation 12).
Participants’ experience of the disjuncture between the theoretical education and the practical reality of self-management was so commonplace that there was an underlying acceptance that there were deficiencies in the scientific understanding of diabetes (Quotation 13).
However, many participants considered that there was a need for those that provided diabetes education to acknowledge that this disjuncture between theory and the lived experience existed and that the anticipated theoretical response to a regimen may not occur for reasons that are not fully understood (Quotation 14).
There were two issues that participants commonly reported as giving rise to inconsistencies between the educational theory of self-management and their lived experience. These were dealing with diet, in particular mixed food meals, and exercise. Participants found that clinician-led dietary education that addressed the practical reality of a glycemic response to mixed food meals was inadequate and that information on this topic was difficult to access (Quotation 15).
The ability to access quality information on how to maintain glycemic control whilst exercising was a source of frustration for many participants. One participant had established an Australia-wide support group specifically to deal with this problem. Many participants had ceased relying on educational theories and resorted to trial and error (Quotations 16 and 17).
The Provision of Conflicting Advice by Clinicians
Participants reported that the disjuncture between theoretical education and the practical reality of self-management implementation gave rise to the provision of inconsistent advice from and between the clinicians that they consulted. This also led participants to adopt a trial and error approach to self-management (Quotation 18).
For some participants the repeated inconsistencies in theoretical knowledge provided by clinicians and their need to resort to a “trial and error” approach led them to consider that their own health literacy, gained from the lived experience, was more beneficial than that offered by the clinicians (Quotation 19). But for other participants this knowledge disjuncture and the inconsistent advice of clinicians left them in a state of confusion about how they should manage their disease (Quotation 20). For other participants the repeated inconsistencies in advice had acted as a driver for them to stop utilizing health services (Quotation 21).
The Impact of Inflexible Self-Management Regimen Education
The disjuncture was heightened when diabetes education, based on best practice models, was not aligned with everyday choices, or provided for realistic flexibility (Quotation 22).
Peer-led and Autonomous Diabetes Education
Participants held that peer-led knowledge translation was an integral component of diabetes education. Many participants reported that peer-led learning provided opportunity for real-life explanations or solutions to self-management problems often not provided for in clinician-led education. Other participants were wary of the credibility of information gained through peers. Participants reported that for some self-management issues, such as those related to sexual function and recreational drug use, peer-led or autonomous learning provided the only source of information available. Participants reported that diabetes consumer organizations were a viable source of education and that technology had the capacity to improve access to education but that clinicians and diabetes consumer organizations underutilized technology as a teaching tool. Relevant participant quotations for these subthemes are reported in Table 7.
Table 7.
Quote number | Quotation |
---|---|
3.1 The value of peer-based learning | |
23 | “I learn things from other people with diabetes all the time. All the time.” [MOM: female, age 33, T1D duration 13 years] |
24 | “It’s comforting to realize that other people are going through the same thing that you are, which you don’t get through a doctor. The doctor never says ‘I have another patient going through a similar experience’. But that’s a help!” [RAS: female, age 30, T1D duration 12 years] |
25 | “I found other diabetics have been the easiest people to talk to cause you hear some things from the medical professions where I have just gone ‘Nuh! Surely there is a way around that one’. And having other diabetics around has helped amazingly.” [DOS: female, age 32, T1D duration 25 years] |
26 | “Stress impacts on my BSL but I was never warned that it would. It is all trial and error which is not a good system.” [SAB: female, age 24, T1D duration 18 years] |
27 | “(Name of chat room): Every so often if I have a question and I want some advice then I will look it up. For example, when I went traveling by myself I looked it up and saw what everyone else had given about what to carry on the plane: all sorts of different bits and pieces. It is good to be able to find information from other people who are living with diabetes and have had similar experiences as well.” [RAP: female, age 20, T1D duration 3 years] |
28 | “(In diabetes education) there is still very much this didactic direction of ‘this is what you can and can’t do’. I find people with diabetes act that way as well. So participating in a chat room? No thanks I’d rather just go my own way.” [AMM: female, age 33, T1D duration 25 years] |
29 | “No I’d be a bit skeptical going on to diabetes forums because you don’t know if the information is genuine.” [KRS: female, age 33, T1D duration 6 years] |
3.2 Taboo subjects in clinician led education | |
30 | “I have had diabetes for 20 years… You gradually work out what works for you. For example when I’m menstruating I have to drop my long acting insulin. Things like that I had to work out for myself. I wasn’t ever educated on how menstruation impacts on your BSLs”. [AMM: female, age 33, T1D duration 25 years] |
31 | “I have a friend and we talk between us: like after alcohol I always crash and I can eat five times as much without doing insulin. I talk to her about that stuff and she says ‘Yeah I’m like that’. So we see what is normal by comparing what happens to us.” [MAP: female, age 24, T1D duration 2 years] |
32 | “I took party drugs in my twenties and the only way I knew how to manage my diabetes was by asking other people with diabetes. My diabetic friends figured out what sort of effect that it would have on our blood sugars and so I would have a basic idea about how to manage at a party that way.” [DOS: female, age 32, T1DM duration 25 years] |
3.3 Diabetes consumer organization led learning | |
33 | “I’ve taken days off work to attend these meetings but you can’t keep doing that.” [RAS: female, age 30, T1DM duration 12 years] |
34 | “I get invites (from diabetes support organizations) about sessions that I think would be useful for me to attend but they are run at a time that I can never attend. Maybe the flexibility needed isn’t to run them at another time but to make them available via technology. The session doesn’t have to change schedule but just let me access it.” [CHS: male, age 32, T1DM duration 9 years] |
35 | “Why couldn’t they just put it on You-tube for people to download it.” [RAS: female, age 30, T1DM duration 12 years] |
BSLs blood sugar levels, T1D type 1 diabetes
The Value of Peer-led Learning
Participants expressed the view that, as formal diabetes education did not elaborate on the disjuncture between the theoretical glycemic response and the practical reality, peer-led education had become an important component in improving their health literacy (Quotation 23).
The ways in which participants had established peer-networks to improve health literacy varied. These included the following: having friends or relatives with diabetes; meeting other people with diabetes at hospital-based clinics or diabetes support organization functions; establishing specialized-function support groups in particular related to exercise; and establishing Facebook groups and online chat-rooms. Peer-led discussion not only provided a basis for education but also for reassurance that it was common that the lived experience of effective diabetes self-management differed from theoretically based education scenarios; a factor that participants found was not emphasized in clinician-led education (Quotation 24).
Peer-led education provided solutions for self-management issues that were not sufficiently covered by clinician-led education (Quotation 25).
There were day-to-day issues that a number of participants reported that clinician-led education had not considered. These included dealing with the glycemic response in relation to stress or mental challenges in work or study (Quotation 26).
Of participants who were aware of or had used chat-rooms for diabetes self-management, there was divergence in opinion as to their value as an educational tool. Some participants supported the educational role of such sites (Quotation 27); others found that the pedagogy of chat-room learning was not suitable for them (Quotation 28); whilst for other participants the trustworthiness of the quality of the information sourced in chat-rooms was problematic (Quotation 29).
Taboo Subjects in Clinician-led Education
Participants identified self-management issues for which education was only available from their peers: either because clinician-led education had not encompassed such topics or because the participants did not feel comfortable about seeking advice about such topics from their clinicians. Such topics included menstruation, sexual function, and recreational drug use (Quotation 30). Whilst many participants had been educated on the impact of alcohol on their glycemic response, participants still turned to peer-led education for methods of dealing with self-management issues related to alcohol use due to their hesitation in discussing such issues with their health team (Quotation 31). Self-management education in the use of recreational or illicit drugs was an area that participants identified as not being adequately addressed in clinician-led education. Participants who had taken recreational or illicit drugs had relied solely on peer-led education. That education was sourced through friends, Internet chat lines, and blogs (Quotation 32).
Diabetes Consumer Organization-led Learning
Many participants supplemented their clinician-led diabetes education by attending forums organized by diabetes support organizations. However, accessibility issues for attendance at these educational forums caused by work or other commitments created problems (Quotation 33). Participants considered that technology could potentiate accessibility to diabetes education, in particular by the ability to view educational sessions online. However, participants perceived that clinicians and diabetes consumer organizations had not optimized their use of such tools (Quotations 34 and 35)
Discussion
This research set out to explore issues related to diabetes education that young adults report could be more comprehensively addressed to enhance their autonomy and confidence in diabetes self-management. The findings reveal that young adults with T1D perceive that gaps in diabetes knowledge can eventuate by clinician assumptions about their previous diabetes education; that clinician-led diabetes education tends to be didactic and not emphasize skills for self-directed learning; that there are opportunistic stages of learning; that there are taboo subjects in clinician-led education; that clinicians should further promote education on new technologies; that acknowledgment by clinicians of gaps in the scientific understanding of diabetes would be beneficial, that failure to do so erodes the therapeutic relationship, leads to ‘trial and error’ regimens and promotes reliance on peer-led education; that there are dilemmas inherent in peer-led education, and that diabetes consumer led-education could be more user friendly.
Our finding that knowledge gaps can eventuate suggests that young adults with T1D might benefit from the availability of a comprehensive structured education program, accessible at appropriate intervals throughout the patient journey. Studies evince the effectiveness of a variety of structured programs [40, 42, 49]. A comprehensive education program could either be incorporated into patients’ continuing clinician-led education or ancillary to it. The availability of a comprehensive education program in the period before exit from pediatric services or entry into adult services would help to mitigate knowledge gaps created by incorrect clinician assumptions of an adolescent’s diabetes knowledge as they transition to autonomous self-management. Access to a comprehensive education program would also benefit those that may have been overwhelmed by their initial diabetes education at diagnosis and enable such persons to address knowledge gaps without having to provide explanation or acknowledgment for their failure to fully comprehend their initial education. Access to a comprehensive education program would also assist to negate knowledge fragmentation due to piecemeal continuing diabetes education. Patient perceptions of fragmented knowledge due to piecemeal continuing diabetes education have been reported elsewhere [49]. Our findings suggest that there has not been adequate promotion by clinicians of available structured education programs such as the DAFNE course, notwithstanding that studies report improved glycemic control and quality of life for patients following such training [50].
Our findings that clinician-led diabetes education tends towards the didactic, and not based on the principles of problem-based learning, suggests that current recommendations on the pedagogy of diabetes education are not being widely implemented for young adults with T1D in Australia [51]. The autonomous capacity of an individual to improve their health literacy is an important component of patient-centered care and should be an integral feature of the curriculum of clinician-led education. Our finding that participants noticed stages of motivation towards undertaking diabetes education is consistent with the stages of behavior change model [52]. This finding supports stage-matched promotion of education interventions and proactive recruitment procedures for further diabetes education by clinicians dependent upon the theoretically cyclical nature of motivation. Easy access to online, institutionally endorsed educational tools might opportunistically maximize the stage-matched promotion of diabetes education and strategies to assist with self-management and is consistent with positive research findings regarding health promotion tools [52].
That participants had to rely on peer-led education to understand the glycemic response to sexual and lifestyle activities implies that there are taboo topics in clinician-led education that are not being routinely addressed. Changes in the glycemic response to menstruation have been reported and specific discussion of menstrual changes that may impact on glycemia should be routinely incorporated into the diabetes education program of any female with T1D, post menarche [53]. Educational diabetes management considerations should include anticipated glycemic responses to all gender-specific sexual activities. As it is recommended that diabetes education become more individualized, clinicians need to be aware of their patients’ lifestyle choices including recreational drug use. It is not adequate that education on the glycemic response to recreational drugs is dependent upon peer-led experience. Young adults should be encouraged to seek clinician education, which should be matched with psychological support for healthier lifestyle choices.
Reports by our participants that many clinicians are ‘technophobic’ and do not initiate patient education about new technologies to assist with self-management stands in contrast to the reported needs of young adults with T1D that they want to be kept up-to-date with knowledge of the latest technologies [44]. That young Australian adults with T1D need to resort to self-education regarding new technologies has been previously reported [54]. It has been asserted that diabetes education is not adequate when clinician provision is determined by the desire of the patient to have to request or seek out that information [55].
Our results indicate that there may be inherent benefits in clinician acknowledgment and discussion in diabetes education of the imperfect scientific understanding of the physiology of glycemia. Such discussion would prepare young adults with T1D for variable responses to recommended regimens. The imperfect scientific understanding of the glycemic response to a mixed food diet was established by a recent study assessing the role of glycemic load (GL) on insulinemia. GL, the best available predictor, explained less than half the predicted variability on post-prandial insulinemia. The authors concluded: “Factors unknown and potentially more important than GL are yet to be discovered” [56]. Clinician-led warnings might contribute to better self-management practices as they would assist in minimizing patient blame for unexplained glycemic variation; increase patient trust in clinician understanding of diabetes management and provide a basis for why inconsistent advice may be provided by different clinicians in the health care team. The provision of inconsistent and contradictory information by clinicians has been recorded elsewhere [55].
Our results indicate that peer-led education and support is a vital component for improvement of self-management skills for young adults with T1D. Studies suggest that peer involvement in diabetes education leads to improved outcomes [57–59]. Yet most of our participants reported that they had accessed peer-education and support themselves without clinicians directing them to those resources. Clinicians should consider an emphasis on assisting patients to establish peer education and support networks.
Gaining insight into the perspectives of young adults with T1D reveals challenges to more effective diabetes education. By addressing these challenges we would then be on the road to more patient-centered systems of care and the benefits for both patients and clinicians that such systems provide, including improved glycemic control [60, 61], greater patient satisfaction [61, 62], higher levels of patient well-being [62, 63], increased patient engagement [61–63], and more provider satisfaction [63].
Study Limitations
A major limitation of this study was the biased sample because of recruitment by self-selection and through advertisements in diabetes-related support organizations. Eighty percent of the survey sample was female; 84% had private health insurance, and 78.7% had tertiary or higher levels of education. These are higher than national averages. As well, 34% of the sample reported their last glycated hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) level was <7% (53 mmol/mol), whereas it has been reported that <20% of adults with diabetes in Australia maintain a HbA1c level of <7% (53 mmol/mol) [13, 14]. Our attrition rate from all services was 2%, whereas attrition rates in Australia have been reported in this age group as high as 50% [13, 46]. The demographic and clinical characteristics of our sample indicate a bias towards patients that actively sought out and were more motivated toward further diabetes education. The clinical indicators recorded in our survey were self-reported: results may be subject to recall and reporting bias. Further research is required to determine the perceptions of young adults in a less motivated group. Our research was limited to young adults with T1D: these results may not be generalizable across all age groups of patients with T1D.
Conclusion
This study is one of very few studies that have sought the opinion of young adults with T1D about their experiences of diabetes education. Assisting T1D self-management practices by improving health literacy and, therefore, promoting patient autonomy can be instrumental in improving glycemic control, thereby avoiding diabetes-related disease complications. Our findings indicate that there are opportunities to further develop clinician led-diabetes education, to improve patient outcomes by enhancing autonomous health literacy skills, and to incorporate peer-led education and support with clinician-led education. Our results provide evidence for the potential value of patient engagement in quality improvement and the redesign of health services. This study provides insights into ways that may assist in improving health service delivery and health outcomes through improved diabetes education services for these young adults.
Electronic supplementary material
Below is the link to the electronic supplementary material.
Acknowledgments
We thank the young adults that were involved in the interviews and or the survey for their contribution to this research.
This research was conducted under the auspices of a program of research funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia. The failure of the majority of Australian adults to reach clinically dictated treatment target levels of T1D control is a case study in the program.
All named authors meet the ICMJE criteria for authorship for this manuscript, take responsibility for the integrity of the work as a whole, and have given final approval for the version to be published.
Authors’ contributions
Janice Wiley (JW) conducted the study, analyzed the data, contributed to discussions, and wrote, reviewed, and edited the manuscript. Mary Westbrook (MW) analyzed data, contributed to discussions, and reviewed and edited the manuscript. Janet Long (JL) analyzed the data; Jeffrey Braithwaite, Richard Day and Jerry Greenfield contributed to discussions, and reviewed and edited the manuscript. Janice Wiley is the guarantor of this work, had full access to all the data in the study, and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.
Conflict of interest
Janice Wiley, Mary Westbrook, Janet Long, Richard Day, Jerry Greenfield and Jeffrey Braithwaite declare they have no conflict of interest.
Compliance with ethics
The University of New South Wales granted ethics approval: HREC 10395. All procedures followed were in accordance with the ethical standards of the responsible committee Ion human experimentation (institutional and national) and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2000. Informed consent was obtained from all participants in this study.
Open Access
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.
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