Motivation and diabetes self-management.

Chronic Illn

Department of Health Psychology, University of Missouri, School of Health Professions One Hospital Drive, Columbia, USA.

Published: September 2010

Objective: To examine the relationship between autonomous motivation and diabetes self-care activities among individuals with diabetes.

Methods: Seventy-seven individuals recruited from outpatient clinic registries (64% female, 77% Caucasian, mean age 63 years) completed measures of diabetes-related self-care (Summary of Diabetes Self-care Activities), motivation (Treatment Self-regulation Questionnaire), health literacy (Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine, Newest Vital Sign), health (SF-36v2), social support (Social Support Survey) and self-efficacy (Perceived Competence Scale).

Results: Autonomous motivation was the only variable significantly associated with maintaining diet (p<0.0001) and blood glucose testing (p<0.04) in regression analyses. No significant associations were identified for exercise. The variable of age approached significance (p = 0.06), with older individuals being less likely to have exercised in the past week.

Discussion: Individuals in this study had difficulty in maintaining self-care demands, especially exercise. Meeting recommended levels of self-care activity was challenging, even for patients with adequate levels of health literacy. Individuals with higher levels of autonomous motivation reported higher frequencies for maintaining diet and testing blood glucose, however, which supports the utility of Self-Determination Theory in promoting diabetes self-care.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1742395310375630DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

motivation diabetes
8
autonomous motivation
8
diabetes self-care
8
self-care activities
8
social support
8
motivation
4
diabetes self-management
4
self-management objective
4
objective examine
4
examine relationship
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!