Release Date: May 18, 2005
GROUP-BASED
EDUCATION IMPROVES DIABETES SELF-MANAGEMENT, STUDIES FIND
By Lise Stevens, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Patients with type 2 diabetes who participate in group education programs
to manage their disease show measurable improvement and require less
medication, according to a systematic review of current evidence.
Group-based education resulted
in improved diabetes control as reflected by blood glucose levels
and patients’ knowledge of diabetes.
Evidence also suggested that participants in diabetes group education
programs may reduce their blood pressure and body weight and increase
self-empowerment, quality of life, self-management skills and treatment
satisfaction.
Patient management programs, however, are not routinely used to treat
people with diabetes.
Trudi Deakin, Ph.D, of Burnley, Pendle and Rossendlae primary care
trust and a diabetes research dietician at Burnley General Hospital
in England, led a team that reviewed 11 studies involving 1,532 patients
with type 2 diabetes to assess the effects of group-based (six or more
participants) patient-centered diabetes training in both the short
(four to six months) and long term (12 to 14 months). The researchers
also assessed the effects of training on clinical, lifestyle and psychosocial
outcomes.
“The … review shows that group education for diabetes
mellitus works and should move forward, especially because it’s
cost-effective. The results should encourage more research in this
area,” Deakin says.
The review appears in the most recent issue of The Cochrane Library,
a publication of The Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization
that evaluates medical research. Systematic reviews draw evidence-based
conclusions about medical practice after considering both the content
and quality of existing medical trials on a topic.
Type 2 diabetes is a progressive disease characterized by high levels
of blood glucose resulting from defects in insulin production, insulin
action, or both, and can lead to high blood pressure, cardiovascular
disease, blindness, kidney disease, limb amputations and premature
death.
The disease is associated with physical inactivity, older age, obesity,
family history of diabetes and is more prevalent in African Americans,
Hispanic/Latino Americans, American Indians, and some Asian Americans
and Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders.
Patients can minimize the effects of diabetes by taking medication
and also by making lifestyle changes such as improving their diet and
getting exercise which lower blood glucose levels, control blood pressure,
and improve cholesterol levels. Studies have shown that such lifestyle
changes can delay or prevent the onset of diabetes in patients who
are high risk. However, getting patients to comply with treatment recommendations
has been a longstanding challenge for health-care practitioners.
According to the World Health Organization, about 3.2 million deaths
every year are attributable to diabetes complications. The Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that as of 2002, 18.2
million people in the United States had diabetes, with 1.3 million
new U.S. cases are diagnosed each year.
“ Patient-centered strategies such as those in the review should
be used. It’s an inexpensive way to go and the effects as shown
in the review are consistent and large enough to be meaningful,” says
Richard Surwit, Ph.D., chief of the Division of Medical Psychology
and vice chairman for research at Duke University Medical Center. “All
meta-analyses have their limitations, but this one lends credence to
that these programs seem to work,” he says.
Deakin notes that patient-centered
programs are vital in developing the knowledge, skills and confidence
required for people to self-manage
their diabetes. “Education to individuals, not just verbal communication
but in other forms such discovery learning usual visual aids, is very
important,” Deakin says. “One-on-one this takes time, but
spending time with individuals in a group format and having the peer
support makes it work in more than one way.”
Other challenges inherent
in such programs include finding ways to reach communities and ensuring
that patients return for follow-up visits. “Certainly
dropout has been a problem in diabetes education programs in the past,” Deakin
says. “We just have to get patients fully engaged from the start.”
In terms of access to diabetes
information, Deakin says, “Education
programs must be delivered in places that are accessible to the community,
that are near to where patients live; supermarkets tours, for example,
can help people learn what to eat and when to eat and to read labels.” Patients
with low or no literacy also may be more difficult to reach, Deakin
adds. “If literacy is a problem, we have to deliver education
in another format that people don’t have to read.”
Deakin T, McShane CE, Cade JE, Williams RDRR. Group based training
for self-management strategies in people with type 2 diabetes mellitus
(Review). The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2005, Issue 2.
The Cochrane Collaboration is an international nonprofit, independent
organization that produces and disseminates systematic reviews of health
care interventions and promotes the search for evidence in the form
of clinical trials and other studies of interventions. Visit www.cochrane.org for more information.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Vice President of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
press@cfah.org
|