Inadequate investment on management of diabetes education.

J Res Med Sci

Department of Nursing, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran.

Published: August 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates the current patient education process for diabetes in Iran, highlighting the need for reform by identifying its strengths and weaknesses.
  • It involved interviews with diabetes nurse educators and an internal medicine specialist, revealing three main issues: inadequately trained educators, unstructured educational approaches, and poor management of the education process.
  • The findings indicate a lack of investment in effective patient education strategies within the National Diabetes Prevention and Control Program, emphasizing the absence of scientific structure and oversight.

Article Abstract

Aims: Reforming and improving the patient education process need more insight into the strengths and weaknesses of the existing education process. There is little documentation on patient education in National Diabetes Prevention and Control Program in Iran, so the present study aimed to describe patient education process in diabetes centers in one of the provinces of Iran.

Materials And Methods: This is a qualitative content analysis. Twelve nurses who work as diabetes nurse educators (DNEs) and an internal medicine specialist participated in this study. Data was obtained through semi-structured face-to-face interviews, a focus group, existing documents, field notes, and multiple observations. Data analysis was guided by the conventional approach of qualitative content analysis.

Results: Three main themes including unequipped trainers (insufficient knowledge and experience, lack of appropriate educational facilities, lack of time, lack of patient's interest), unstructured education (lack of educational need assessment, lack of evaluation, lack of continuing patient education), unmanaged education (lack of official planning for patient education and supervising the education process) emerged from qualitative content analysis.

Conclusions: Although patient education is one of the important strategies in National Diabetes Prevention and Control Program, there however has not been necessary investment and adequate space to achieve it. Patient education was not structured and based on scientific principles. Training of diabetes nurse educators (DNEs) is neglected, and there is no supervision on patient education process.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3687889PMC

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