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Development of an educational ‘toolkit’ for health professionals and their patients with prediabetes: The WAKEUP study (Ways of Addressing Knowledge Education and Understanding in Pre‐diabetes)
Author(s) -
Evans P. H.,
Greaves C.,
Winder R.,
FearnSmith J.,
Campbell J. L.
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
diabetic medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.474
H-Index - 145
eISSN - 1464-5491
pISSN - 0742-3071
DOI - 10.1111/j.1464-5491.2007.02130.x
Subject(s) - medicine , prediabetes , seriousness , focus group , medical education , resource (disambiguation) , action (physics) , health professionals , qualitative research , health education , nursing , knowledge management , health care , diabetes mellitus , public health , type 2 diabetes , computer science , law , business , endocrinology , computer network , sociology , marketing , quantum mechanics , political science , physics , economics , social science , economic growth
Aims  To identify key messages about pre‐diabetes and to design, develop and pilot an educational toolkit to address the information needs of patients and health professionals. Methods  Mixed qualitative methodology within an action research framework. Focus group interviews with patients and health professionals and discussion with an expert reference group aimed to identify the important messages and produce a draft toolkit. Two action research cycles were then conducted in two general practices, during which the draft toolkit was used and video‐taped consultations and follow‐up patient interviews provided further data. Framework analysis techniques were used to examine the data and to elicit action points for improving the toolkit. Results  The key messages about pre‐diabetes concerned the seriousness of the condition, the preventability of progression to diabetes, and the need for lifestyle change. As well as feedback on the acceptability and use of the toolkit, four main themes were identified in the data: knowledge and education needs (of both patients and health professionals); communicating knowledge and motivating change; redesign of practice systems to support pre‐diabetes management and the role of the health professional. The toolkit we developed was found to be an acceptable and useful resource for both patients and health practitioners. Conclusions  Three key messages about pre‐diabetes were identified. A toolkit of information materials for patients with pre‐diabetes and the health professionals and ideas for improving practice systems for managing pre‐diabetes were developed and successfully piloted. Further work is needed to establish the best mode of delivery of the WAKEUP toolkit.

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