患者教育和远程护理随访对糖尿病患者自我护理实践的影响:交叉和准实验研究。

JMIR nursing Pub Date : 2025-03-21 DOI:10.2196/67339
Mohammed Alsahli, Alaa Abd-Alrazaq, Dalia M Fathy, Sahar A Abdelmohsen, Olfat Abdulgafoor Gushgari, Heba K Ghazy, Amal Yousef Abdelwahed
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:信息和通信技术可用于远程护理,以促进远程服务提供,从而有助于缓解全球普遍的护理短缺以及特定应用(例如,在地理上偏远的社区)。因此,远程护理可以使服务更接近最终用户,为患者提供便利,降低住院和卫生系统成本,从而实现更有效的资源分配。目的:探讨患者教育和远程护理随访对1型和2型糖尿病患者自我保健指标的影响。方法:在第一阶段,对埃及Kafr El Sheikh大学医院400名糖尿病患者的自我保健行为进行了横断面描述性分析。在第二阶段,我们采用前测后测实验,从第一阶段有意招募了100名自我护理实践知识较低的患者,以确定通过远程护理进行为期4周的干预的影响。通过电话随访提醒他们坚持体育锻炼、营养摄入和血糖(即胰岛素)管理建议的重要性。数据收集采用结构化的定量问卷,包括社会人口学特征、医学症状和病史、糖尿病知识。配对t检验分析用于研究干预前后的自我保健行为。结果:参与者的平均年龄为49.7岁(SD 11.5)。超过三分之一的人在十年前被诊断为糖尿病(135/400,33.8%),并且肥胖(147/400,36.8%)。近一半(176/400,44%)接受胰岛素治疗,大多数患有心脏病(231/400,57.7%)和空腹血糖升高的糖尿病症状(365/400,91.3%)。DM知识得分较高(255/400,63.7%)。男性的知识水平(102/200,51%)显著低于女性(153/200,76.5%);结论:新发现的证据表明,患者教育和远程护理随访有可能改善糖尿病患者的自我护理行为。通过远程护理提供频繁的护理强化,可以改善自我管理,同时减少患者前往临床机构的需求(即改善患者状况,降低卫生系统净成本)。本研究的结果强调了将远程护理纳入糖尿病常规护理的必要性,需要更多的研究来纵向分析其长期疗效和可持续性,并在不同的临床和地理背景下。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Effectiveness of Patients' Education and Telenursing Follow-Ups on Self-Care Practices of Patients With Diabetes Mellitus: Cross-Sectional and Quasi-Experimental Study.

Background: Information and communications technology can be used in telenursing to facilitate remote service delivery, thereby helping mitigate the general global nursing shortage as well as particular applications (eg, in geographically remote communities). Telenursing can thus bring services closer to end users, offering patient convenience and reduced hospitalization and health system costs, enabling more effective resource allocation.

Objective: This study aims to examine the impact of patients' education and telenursing follow-ups on self-care indicators among patients with type I and type II diabetes mellitus (DM).

Methods: In phase I, a cross-sectional descriptive analysis was conducted to evaluate the self-care practices of 400 patients with DM at Kafr El Sheikh University Hospital in Egypt. In phase II, a pretest-posttest experiment was applied with a selected group of 100 patients purposively recruited from phase I due to their low self-care practice knowledge to ascertain the impacts of a 4-week intervention delivered via telenursing. They were reminded via telephone follow-up communication of the importance of adhering to recommendations on physical activity, nutritional intake, and the management of blood sugar (ie, insulin). Data collection was undertaken using a structured quantitative questionnaire, encompassing sociodemographic characteristics, medical symptoms and history, and knowledge of DM. Paired t test analysis was applied to study pre- and postintervention self-care behaviors.

Results: Participants had a mean age of 49.7 (SD 11.5) years. More than one-third received their DM diagnosis over a decade previously (135/400, 33.8%) and were obese (147/400, 36.8%). Almost half (176/400, 44%) received insulin, and the majority had cardiac disease (231/400, 57.7%) and the DM symptom of elevated blood sugar levels while fasting (365/400, 91.3%). A relatively high score of DM knowledge was reported (255/400, 63.7%). Males exhibited significantly lower knowledge levels (102/200, 51%) compared to females (153/200, 76.5%; P<.001). The intervention was effective in improving knowledge of DM (t99=30.7, two-tailed; P<.001), self-care practices (t99=53.7, two-tailed; P<.001), and self-care skills (t99= 47, two-tailed; P<.001) among patients with DM.

Conclusions: The emergent evidence suggests that patients' education and telenursing follow-ups have the potential to improve self-care behavior in patients with DM. The delivery of frequent nursing reinforcement via telenursing enables improved self-management while contemporaneously reducing the need for patients to visit clinical settings (ie, improving patient condition and reducing net health system costs). The outcomes of this research underscore the need to integrate telenursing within conventional care for DM, and more research is needed to longitudinally assay its efficacy and sustainability over the long term and in different clinical and geographical contexts.

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