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An Unsafe/Safe Typology in People with Type 2 Diabetes: Bridging Patients’ Expectations, Personality Traits, Medication Adherence, and Clinical Outcomes

BACKGROUND: Support programs are provided to people with diabetes to help them manage their disease. However, adherence to and persistence in support programs are often low, making it difficult to demonstrate their effectiveness. AIM: To identify the determinants of patients’ perceived interest in d...

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Autores principales: Reach, Gérard, Benarbia, Laurent, Benhamou, Pierre-Yves, Delemer, Brigitte, Dubois, Séverine, Gouet, Didier, Guerci, Bruno, Jeandidier, Nathalie, Lachgar, Karim, Le Pape, Gilles, Leroy, Rémy, Masgnaux, Jean-Hugues, Raclet, Philippe, Reznik, Yves, Riveline, Jean-Pierre, Schaepelynck, Pauline, Vambergue, Anne, Vergès, Bruno
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9148599/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35642243
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S365398
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author Reach, Gérard
Benarbia, Laurent
Benhamou, Pierre-Yves
Delemer, Brigitte
Dubois, Séverine
Gouet, Didier
Guerci, Bruno
Jeandidier, Nathalie
Lachgar, Karim
Le Pape, Gilles
Leroy, Rémy
Masgnaux, Jean-Hugues
Raclet, Philippe
Reznik, Yves
Riveline, Jean-Pierre
Schaepelynck, Pauline
Vambergue, Anne
Vergès, Bruno
author_facet Reach, Gérard
Benarbia, Laurent
Benhamou, Pierre-Yves
Delemer, Brigitte
Dubois, Séverine
Gouet, Didier
Guerci, Bruno
Jeandidier, Nathalie
Lachgar, Karim
Le Pape, Gilles
Leroy, Rémy
Masgnaux, Jean-Hugues
Raclet, Philippe
Reznik, Yves
Riveline, Jean-Pierre
Schaepelynck, Pauline
Vambergue, Anne
Vergès, Bruno
author_sort Reach, Gérard
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Support programs are provided to people with diabetes to help them manage their disease. However, adherence to and persistence in support programs are often low, making it difficult to demonstrate their effectiveness. AIM: To identify the determinants of patients’ perceived interest in diabetes support programs because it may be a powerful determinant of effective participation in such programs. PATIENTS AND METHODS: An online study conducted in April 2021 in metropolitan France on 600 people with diabetes recruited from a consumer panel. A 64-item psychosocial questionnaire including a question asking to evaluate the helpfulness of a support program was used. Univariate, multivariate, and multiple correspondence analyses were performed. RESULTS: The existence of a typology, known as Unsafe/Safe, was discovered, in which patients with type 2 diabetes respond in two distinct ways. Type U (unsafe) patients, who believe that a support program would be helpful, are more likely to be nonadherent to their treatment, have high hemoglobin A1c levels, have at least one diabetic complication, lack information regarding their disease and treatment, rate the burden of their disease and impairment of their quality of life as high, worry about their future, and are pessimistic. Type S (safe) patients have the opposite characteristics. Type U patients can be dichotomized into two broad classes: one in which they lack information regarding disease and treatment and the other in which alterations in the quality of life and burden of the disease predominate. Insulin-treated patients give more importance to the lack of information, whereas noninsulin-treated patients complain primarily about the burden of the disease and impairment of quality of life. CONCLUSION: This study describes this new U/S typology, proposes a simple method based on a nine-item questionnaire to identify type U patients by calculating a Program Helpfulness Score described herein, and clarifies the nature of the intervention to be provided to them. This novel approach could be applied to other chronic diseases.
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spelling pubmed-91485992022-05-30 An Unsafe/Safe Typology in People with Type 2 Diabetes: Bridging Patients’ Expectations, Personality Traits, Medication Adherence, and Clinical Outcomes Reach, Gérard Benarbia, Laurent Benhamou, Pierre-Yves Delemer, Brigitte Dubois, Séverine Gouet, Didier Guerci, Bruno Jeandidier, Nathalie Lachgar, Karim Le Pape, Gilles Leroy, Rémy Masgnaux, Jean-Hugues Raclet, Philippe Reznik, Yves Riveline, Jean-Pierre Schaepelynck, Pauline Vambergue, Anne Vergès, Bruno Patient Prefer Adherence Original Research BACKGROUND: Support programs are provided to people with diabetes to help them manage their disease. However, adherence to and persistence in support programs are often low, making it difficult to demonstrate their effectiveness. AIM: To identify the determinants of patients’ perceived interest in diabetes support programs because it may be a powerful determinant of effective participation in such programs. PATIENTS AND METHODS: An online study conducted in April 2021 in metropolitan France on 600 people with diabetes recruited from a consumer panel. A 64-item psychosocial questionnaire including a question asking to evaluate the helpfulness of a support program was used. Univariate, multivariate, and multiple correspondence analyses were performed. RESULTS: The existence of a typology, known as Unsafe/Safe, was discovered, in which patients with type 2 diabetes respond in two distinct ways. Type U (unsafe) patients, who believe that a support program would be helpful, are more likely to be nonadherent to their treatment, have high hemoglobin A1c levels, have at least one diabetic complication, lack information regarding their disease and treatment, rate the burden of their disease and impairment of their quality of life as high, worry about their future, and are pessimistic. Type S (safe) patients have the opposite characteristics. Type U patients can be dichotomized into two broad classes: one in which they lack information regarding disease and treatment and the other in which alterations in the quality of life and burden of the disease predominate. Insulin-treated patients give more importance to the lack of information, whereas noninsulin-treated patients complain primarily about the burden of the disease and impairment of quality of life. CONCLUSION: This study describes this new U/S typology, proposes a simple method based on a nine-item questionnaire to identify type U patients by calculating a Program Helpfulness Score described herein, and clarifies the nature of the intervention to be provided to them. This novel approach could be applied to other chronic diseases. Dove 2022-05-25 /pmc/articles/PMC9148599/ /pubmed/35642243 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S365398 Text en © 2022 Reach et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/This work is published and licensed by Dove Medical Press Limited. The full terms of this license are available at https://www.dovepress.com/terms.php and incorporate the Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) ). By accessing the work you hereby accept the Terms. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed. For permission for commercial use of this work, please see paragraphs 4.2 and 5 of our Terms (https://www.dovepress.com/terms.php).
spellingShingle Original Research
Reach, Gérard
Benarbia, Laurent
Benhamou, Pierre-Yves
Delemer, Brigitte
Dubois, Séverine
Gouet, Didier
Guerci, Bruno
Jeandidier, Nathalie
Lachgar, Karim
Le Pape, Gilles
Leroy, Rémy
Masgnaux, Jean-Hugues
Raclet, Philippe
Reznik, Yves
Riveline, Jean-Pierre
Schaepelynck, Pauline
Vambergue, Anne
Vergès, Bruno
An Unsafe/Safe Typology in People with Type 2 Diabetes: Bridging Patients’ Expectations, Personality Traits, Medication Adherence, and Clinical Outcomes
title An Unsafe/Safe Typology in People with Type 2 Diabetes: Bridging Patients’ Expectations, Personality Traits, Medication Adherence, and Clinical Outcomes
title_full An Unsafe/Safe Typology in People with Type 2 Diabetes: Bridging Patients’ Expectations, Personality Traits, Medication Adherence, and Clinical Outcomes
title_fullStr An Unsafe/Safe Typology in People with Type 2 Diabetes: Bridging Patients’ Expectations, Personality Traits, Medication Adherence, and Clinical Outcomes
title_full_unstemmed An Unsafe/Safe Typology in People with Type 2 Diabetes: Bridging Patients’ Expectations, Personality Traits, Medication Adherence, and Clinical Outcomes
title_short An Unsafe/Safe Typology in People with Type 2 Diabetes: Bridging Patients’ Expectations, Personality Traits, Medication Adherence, and Clinical Outcomes
title_sort unsafe/safe typology in people with type 2 diabetes: bridging patients’ expectations, personality traits, medication adherence, and clinical outcomes
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9148599/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35642243
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S365398
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