Diabetes Education Impact on Hypoglycemia Outcomes: A Systematic Review of Evidence and Gaps in the Literature.

IF 3.9 Q1 Health Professions
Diabetes Educator Pub Date : 2019-08-01 Epub Date: 2019-06-18 DOI:10.1177/0145721719855931
Jacqueline LaManna, Michelle L Litchman, Jane K Dickinson, Andrew Todd, Mary M Julius, Christina R Whitehouse, Suzanne Hyer, Jan Kavookjian
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引用次数: 27

Abstract

Purpose: The primary purpose of this study is to report a systematic review of evidence and gaps in the literature among well-conducted studies assessing the impact of diabetes education on hypoglycemia outcomes and secondarily reporting the impact on other included target outcomes.

Methods: The authors used a modified Cochrane method to systematically search and review English-language titles, abstracts, and full-text articles published in the United States between January 2001 and December 2017, with diabetes education specified as an intervention and a directly measurable outcome for hypoglycemia risk or events included.

Results: Fourteen quasi-experimental, experimental, and case-control studies met the inclusion criteria, with 8 articles reporting a positive impact of diabetes self-management education and support (DSMES) on hypoglycemia outcomes; 2 of the 8 reported decreased hypoglycemia events, and 1 reported decreased events in both the intervention and control groups. In addition, 5 studies targeted change in reported hypoglycemia symptoms, with all 5 reporting a significant decrease. DSMES also demonstrated an impact on intermediate (knowledge gain, behavior change) and long-term (humanistic and economic/utilization) outcomes. An absence of common hypoglycemia measures and terminology and suboptimal descriptions of DSMES programs for content, delivery, duration, practitioner types, and participants were identified as gaps in the literature.

Conclusions: Most retained studies reported that diabetes education positively affected varied measures of hypoglycemia outcomes (number of events, reported symptoms) as well as other targeted outcomes. Diabetes education is an important intervention for reducing hypoglycemia events and/or symptoms and should be included as a component of future hypoglycemia risk mitigation studies.

糖尿病教育对低血糖结局的影响:证据和文献空白的系统回顾。
目的:本研究的主要目的是报告一项系统的证据综述和文献空白,这些研究评估了糖尿病教育对低血糖结局的影响,其次报告了对其他纳入目标结局的影响。方法:作者使用改进的Cochrane方法系统地检索和回顾2001年1月至2017年12月期间在美国发表的英文标题、摘要和全文文章,并将糖尿病教育指定为干预措施,并将低血糖风险或事件的直接可测量结果包括在内。结果:14项准实验、实验和病例对照研究符合纳入标准,其中8篇文章报告了糖尿病自我管理教育和支持(DSMES)对低血糖结局的积极影响;8人中2人报告低血糖事件减少,1人报告干预组和对照组的低血糖事件均减少。此外,5项研究针对报告的低血糖症状的变化,所有5项研究都报告了显著减少。DSMES还显示出对中期(知识获取、行为改变)和长期(人文和经济/利用)结果的影响。缺乏常见的低血糖测量和术语,以及对DSMES项目内容、交付、持续时间、从业人员类型和参与者的不理想描述被认为是文献中的空白。结论:大多数保留的研究报告,糖尿病教育对低血糖结局(事件数、报告症状)和其他目标结局的各种测量都有积极影响。糖尿病教育是减少低血糖事件和/或症状的重要干预措施,应作为未来低血糖风险缓解研究的一个组成部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Diabetes Educator
Diabetes Educator 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Diabetes Educator (TDE) is the official journal of the American Association of Di­abetes Educators (AADE). It is a peer-reviewed journal intended to serve as a reference source for the science and art of diabetes management. TDE publishes original articles that relate to aspects of patient care and education, clinical practice and/or research, and the multidisciplinary pro­fession of diabetes education as represented by nurses, dietitians, physicians, pharmacists, mental health professionals, podiatrists, and exercise physiologists.
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