An evaluation of goal setting in the NHS England diabetes prevention programme.

Psychol Health

Manchester Centre of Health Psychology, Division of Psychology and Mental Health, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.

Published: February 2022

We know little about how goal setting is actually delivered in routine practice. The National Health Service Diabetes Prevention Programme (NHS-DPP) is a behavioural intervention aiming to prevent progression to Type 2 diabetes in those at risk. It has been delivered across England by four commercial providers. This study aimed to establish whether goal setting in the NHS-DPP was delivered in line with the current evidence base. Observational study and document review. One-hundred-and-eighteen NHS-DPP sessions with 419 people were observed at eight sites (two sites per provider). Multiple characteristics of goal setting were reliably coded from each providers' programme plans (intended goal setting) and from audio-recorded NHS-DPP sessions (actual goal setting). Providers intended to deliver goal setting in 88.3% of sessions, though goal setting was delivered in only 52.5% of sessions. During delivery, the observed goals set across providers were generally specific (62.5%), set privately (53.1%), with goal difficulty rarely mentioned (3.1%). Goal setting in the NHS-DPP is being under-delivered, and not in line with the evidence base for promoting behavioural change. Goal setting in national behaviour change programmes should be optimised and training provided specifically for goal setting.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08870446.2021.1872790DOI Listing

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