AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the experiences of adults with type 2 diabetes who received telephone-based health coaching to enhance their self-management skills over a year.
  • - Four key themes emerged from interviews: adapting to diabetes challenges, increased mindfulness of wellness, participant-guided behavior changes, and the importance of a supportive coach-client relationship.
  • - Overall, participants viewed diabetes coaching positively, noting its effectiveness in helping them manage their condition more effectively.

Article Abstract

Background: In the past decade, diabetes health coaching, also referred to as diabetes coaching, has emerged as a patient-centered intervention to help individuals with type 2 diabetes gain independence with self-management. This study explores the perceived experience of receiving telephone-based diabetes health coaching among adults living with type 2 diabetes.

Method: A qualitative exploration with an interpretive descriptive design was carried out. Participants from the intervention group of a larger randomized controlled trial who had received a telephone-based diabetes coaching intervention throughout 1 year were invited to participate in a telephone interview with open-ended questions.

Results: Twelve participants were interviewed, and four major themes emerged: ) adapting to ongoing challenges with type 2 diabetes, reflecting how coaching helped individuals integrate diabetes into their daily lives by addressing misconceptions, improving knowledge, encouraging awareness, and easing the transition from oral medication to insulin injections; ) heightened mindfulness of diabetes-related wellness, capturing the greater attention participants gave to their overall well-being and self-management behaviors; ) behavior change guided by the participant, highlighting the differences in participants' motivation, readiness to make changes, and external factors that influenced their ability to make self-management behavior changes; and ) valuing a supportive relationship, illustrating that most participants felt that the unique coach-client relationship was reliable, holistic, nonjudgmental, and encouraging.

Conclusion: Participants found diabetes coaching to be positive and highlighted the various ways it was able to support their ability to manage diabetes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11623037PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/ds23-0046DOI Listing

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