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What happens when patients know more than their doctors? Experiences of health interactions after diabetes patient education: a qualitative patient-led study

OBJECTIVE: To explore the impact of patient education on the lives of people with diabetes, including the effect on interactions with doctors and other healthcare professionals. DESIGN: Qualitative user-led study using longitudinal interviews and 146 h of participant observation. Data were analysed...

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Autores principales: Snow, Rosamund, Humphrey, Charlotte, Sandall, Jane
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3831109/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24231459
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003583
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author Snow, Rosamund
Humphrey, Charlotte
Sandall, Jane
author_facet Snow, Rosamund
Humphrey, Charlotte
Sandall, Jane
author_sort Snow, Rosamund
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To explore the impact of patient education on the lives of people with diabetes, including the effect on interactions with doctors and other healthcare professionals. DESIGN: Qualitative user-led study using longitudinal interviews and 146 h of participant observation. Data were analysed using a narrative approach. PARTICIPANTS: 21 patients with type 1 diabetes, those either about to attend a patient education course or those who had completed the course in the previous 10 years. SETTING: Established patient education centres in three UK teaching hospitals teaching the Dose Adjustment for Normal Eating (DAFNE) course. RESULTS: Both postcourse and several years later, most participants spoke of the experience of taking part in education as life-changingly positive. It helped them understand how to gain control over a very complex disease and freed them from dependence on medical advice and restrictive regimes. However, interactions within the health system following patient education could be fraught. Participants emerged from the course with greater condition-specific knowledge than many of the healthcare professionals they encountered. When these professionals did not understand what their patients were trying to do and were uncomfortable trusting their expertise, there could be serious consequences for these patients' ability to continue effective self-management. CONCLUSIONS: Patients who have in-depth knowledge of their condition encounter problems when their expertise is seen as inappropriate in standard healthcare interactions, and expertise taught to patients in one branch of medicine can be considered non-compliant by those who are not specialists in that field. Although patient education can give people confidence in their own self-management skills, it cannot solve the power imbalance that remains when a generalist healthcare professional, however well meaning, blocks access to medication and supplies needed to manage chronic diseases successfully. There is a role for those involved in primary and hospital care, including those supporting and training healthcare professionals, to recognise these problems and find ways to acknowledge and respect chronic patients' biomedical and practical expertise.
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spelling pubmed-38311092013-11-18 What happens when patients know more than their doctors? Experiences of health interactions after diabetes patient education: a qualitative patient-led study Snow, Rosamund Humphrey, Charlotte Sandall, Jane BMJ Open Health Services Research OBJECTIVE: To explore the impact of patient education on the lives of people with diabetes, including the effect on interactions with doctors and other healthcare professionals. DESIGN: Qualitative user-led study using longitudinal interviews and 146 h of participant observation. Data were analysed using a narrative approach. PARTICIPANTS: 21 patients with type 1 diabetes, those either about to attend a patient education course or those who had completed the course in the previous 10 years. SETTING: Established patient education centres in three UK teaching hospitals teaching the Dose Adjustment for Normal Eating (DAFNE) course. RESULTS: Both postcourse and several years later, most participants spoke of the experience of taking part in education as life-changingly positive. It helped them understand how to gain control over a very complex disease and freed them from dependence on medical advice and restrictive regimes. However, interactions within the health system following patient education could be fraught. Participants emerged from the course with greater condition-specific knowledge than many of the healthcare professionals they encountered. When these professionals did not understand what their patients were trying to do and were uncomfortable trusting their expertise, there could be serious consequences for these patients' ability to continue effective self-management. CONCLUSIONS: Patients who have in-depth knowledge of their condition encounter problems when their expertise is seen as inappropriate in standard healthcare interactions, and expertise taught to patients in one branch of medicine can be considered non-compliant by those who are not specialists in that field. Although patient education can give people confidence in their own self-management skills, it cannot solve the power imbalance that remains when a generalist healthcare professional, however well meaning, blocks access to medication and supplies needed to manage chronic diseases successfully. There is a role for those involved in primary and hospital care, including those supporting and training healthcare professionals, to recognise these problems and find ways to acknowledge and respect chronic patients' biomedical and practical expertise. BMJ Publishing Group 2013-11-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3831109/ /pubmed/24231459 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003583 Text en Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 3.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Health Services Research
Snow, Rosamund
Humphrey, Charlotte
Sandall, Jane
What happens when patients know more than their doctors? Experiences of health interactions after diabetes patient education: a qualitative patient-led study
title What happens when patients know more than their doctors? Experiences of health interactions after diabetes patient education: a qualitative patient-led study
title_full What happens when patients know more than their doctors? Experiences of health interactions after diabetes patient education: a qualitative patient-led study
title_fullStr What happens when patients know more than their doctors? Experiences of health interactions after diabetes patient education: a qualitative patient-led study
title_full_unstemmed What happens when patients know more than their doctors? Experiences of health interactions after diabetes patient education: a qualitative patient-led study
title_short What happens when patients know more than their doctors? Experiences of health interactions after diabetes patient education: a qualitative patient-led study
title_sort what happens when patients know more than their doctors? experiences of health interactions after diabetes patient education: a qualitative patient-led study
topic Health Services Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3831109/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24231459
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003583
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