4.0 Article

Veterans' Interpretation of Diabetes Distress in Diabetes Self-Management: Findings From Cognitive Interviews

Journal

SCIENCE OF DIABETES SELF-MANAGEMENT AND CARE
Volume 47, Issue 5, Pages 391-403

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/26350106211043487

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Durham Center of Innovation to Accelerate Discovery and Practice Transformation Grant [CIN 13-410]
  2. VA HSRD [18-234, 08-027]

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This study aimed to identify additional facets of diabetes distress (DD) in veterans through cognitive interviews, revealing domains affecting DD and T2DM self-management such as access to care, comorbidities, disruptions in routine, emotions and behaviors, and interactions with providers.
Purpose The purpose of this project was to identify additional facets of diabetes distress (DD) in veterans that may be present due to the veteran's military-related experience. Methods The study team completed cognitive interviews with veterans with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) to examine how they answered the Diabetes Distress Scale (DD Scale), a tool that assesses DD. The DD Scale was used because of its strong associations with self-management challenges, physician-related distress, and clinical outcomes. Results The veterans sample (n= 15) was 73% male, mean age of 61 (SD = 8.6), 53% Black, 53% with glycosylated hemoglobin level <9%, and 67% with prescribed insulin. The DD Scale is readily understood by veterans and interpreted. Thematic analysis indicated additional domains affecting DD and T2DM self-management, including access to care, comorbidities, disruptions in routine, fluctuations in emotions and behaviors, interactions with providers, lifelong nature of diabetes, mental health concerns, military as culture, personal characteristics, physical limitations, physical pain, sources of information and support, spirituality, and stigma. Conclusions This study describes how a veteran's military experience may contribute to DD in the context of T2DM self-management. Findings indicate clinicians and researchers should account for additional domains when developing self-management interventions and discussing self-management behaviors with individuals with T2DM.

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