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Diabetes self-management arrangements in Europe: a realist review to facilitate a project implemented in six countries

Diabetes self-management arrangements in Europe: a realist review to facilitate a project implemented in six countries
Diabetes self-management arrangements in Europe: a realist review to facilitate a project implemented in six countries
Background: self-management of long term conditions can promote quality of life whilst delivering benefits to the financing of health care systems. However, rarely are the meso-level influences, likely to be of direct relevance to these desired outcomes, systematically explored. No specific international guidelines exist suggesting the features of the most appropriate structure and organisation of health care systems within which to situate self-management approaches and practices. This review aimed to identify the quantitative literature with regard to diabetes self-management arrangements currently in place within the health care systems of six countries (The United Kingdom, The Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Bulgaria, and Greece) and explore how these are integrated into the broader health care and welfare systems in each country.

Methods: the methodology for a realist review was followed. Publications of interest dating from 2000 to 2013 were identified through appropriate MeSH terms by a systematic search in six bibliographic databases. A search diary was maintained and the studies were assessed for their quality and risk of bias.

Results: following the multi-step search strategy, 56 studies were included in the final review (the majority from the UK) reporting design methods and findings on 21 interventions and programmes for diabetes and chronic disease self-management. Most (11/21, 52%) of the interventions were designed to fit within the context of primary care. The majority (11/21, 52%) highlighted behavioural change as an important goal. Finally, some (5/21, 24%) referred explicitly to Internet-based tools.

Conclusions: this review is based on results which are derived from a total of at least 5,500 individuals residing in the six participating countries. It indicates a policy shift towards patient-centred self-management of diabetes in a primary care context. The professional role of diabetes specialist nurses, the need for multidisciplinary approaches and a focus on patient education emerge as fundamental principles in the design of relevant programmes. Socio-economic circumstances are relevant to the capacity to self-manage and suggest that any gains and progress will be hard to maintain during economic austerity. This realist review should be interpreted within the wider context of a whole systems approach regarding self-care support and chronic illness management
chronic disease, diabetes mellitus, europe, government, delivery of health care, health policy, health personnel, self-care, social welfare
1472-6963
453
Kousoulis, Antonis A.
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Patelarou, Evridiki
cd27250e-ca5e-4161-ae39-d35218d48017
Shea, Sue
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Foss, Christina
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Ruud Knutsen, Ingrid A.
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Todorova, Elka
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Roukova, Poli
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Portillo, Mari
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Pumar-Méndez, María J.
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Mujika, Agurtzane
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Rogers, Anne
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Vassilev, Ivaylo
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Serrano-Gil, Manuel
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Lionis, Christos
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Kousoulis, Antonis A.
ea25ec8b-111d-491c-be82-ba4f18658ec8
Patelarou, Evridiki
cd27250e-ca5e-4161-ae39-d35218d48017
Shea, Sue
5f9f3836-42d1-444e-a2af-10570ee063c7
Foss, Christina
23aae9c1-0d1a-451f-80f7-537fe82d038b
Ruud Knutsen, Ingrid A.
881b18ee-e910-45e9-8a24-ccc6187fe38d
Todorova, Elka
06f536d8-a442-4a47-8bfb-cfc975a2693c
Roukova, Poli
06abef50-0687-4550-8f68-56f8ddb9bee8
Portillo, Mari
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Pumar-Méndez, María J.
ae5f3a1b-1725-4ce7-aa8d-fe4b62209902
Mujika, Agurtzane
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Rogers, Anne
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Vassilev, Ivaylo
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Serrano-Gil, Manuel
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Lionis, Christos
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Kousoulis, Antonis A., Patelarou, Evridiki, Shea, Sue, Foss, Christina, Ruud Knutsen, Ingrid A., Todorova, Elka, Roukova, Poli, Portillo, Mari, Pumar-Méndez, María J., Mujika, Agurtzane, Rogers, Anne, Vassilev, Ivaylo, Serrano-Gil, Manuel and Lionis, Christos (2014) Diabetes self-management arrangements in Europe: a realist review to facilitate a project implemented in six countries. BMC Health Services Research, 14 (1), 453. (doi:10.1186/1472-6963-14-453).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: self-management of long term conditions can promote quality of life whilst delivering benefits to the financing of health care systems. However, rarely are the meso-level influences, likely to be of direct relevance to these desired outcomes, systematically explored. No specific international guidelines exist suggesting the features of the most appropriate structure and organisation of health care systems within which to situate self-management approaches and practices. This review aimed to identify the quantitative literature with regard to diabetes self-management arrangements currently in place within the health care systems of six countries (The United Kingdom, The Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Bulgaria, and Greece) and explore how these are integrated into the broader health care and welfare systems in each country.

Methods: the methodology for a realist review was followed. Publications of interest dating from 2000 to 2013 were identified through appropriate MeSH terms by a systematic search in six bibliographic databases. A search diary was maintained and the studies were assessed for their quality and risk of bias.

Results: following the multi-step search strategy, 56 studies were included in the final review (the majority from the UK) reporting design methods and findings on 21 interventions and programmes for diabetes and chronic disease self-management. Most (11/21, 52%) of the interventions were designed to fit within the context of primary care. The majority (11/21, 52%) highlighted behavioural change as an important goal. Finally, some (5/21, 24%) referred explicitly to Internet-based tools.

Conclusions: this review is based on results which are derived from a total of at least 5,500 individuals residing in the six participating countries. It indicates a policy shift towards patient-centred self-management of diabetes in a primary care context. The professional role of diabetes specialist nurses, the need for multidisciplinary approaches and a focus on patient education emerge as fundamental principles in the design of relevant programmes. Socio-economic circumstances are relevant to the capacity to self-manage and suggest that any gains and progress will be hard to maintain during economic austerity. This realist review should be interpreted within the wider context of a whole systems approach regarding self-care support and chronic illness management

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Accepted/In Press date: 11 September 2014
Published date: 2 October 2014
Keywords: chronic disease, diabetes mellitus, europe, government, delivery of health care, health policy, health personnel, self-care, social welfare
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 384377
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/384377
ISSN: 1472-6963
PURE UUID: 5a7837d6-489f-45b7-a2a7-202b29254bc2
ORCID for Mari Portillo: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1583-6612

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Date deposited: 11 Dec 2015 15:29
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:51

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Contributors

Author: Antonis A. Kousoulis
Author: Evridiki Patelarou
Author: Sue Shea
Author: Christina Foss
Author: Ingrid A. Ruud Knutsen
Author: Elka Todorova
Author: Poli Roukova
Author: Mari Portillo ORCID iD
Author: María J. Pumar-Méndez
Author: Agurtzane Mujika
Author: Anne Rogers
Author: Ivaylo Vassilev
Author: Manuel Serrano-Gil
Author: Christos Lionis

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