已发表论文

2 型糖尿病患者开始胰岛素治疗的障碍:上海南部惠南社区全科医生认知的研究

 

Authors Wen S , Ruan Y, Shi Z, Dan S, Zhou L

Received 24 October 2023

Accepted for publication 19 January 2024

Published 24 January 2024 Volume 2024:17 Pages 393—405

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/DMSO.S446349

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 2

Editor who approved publication: Dr Konstantinos Tziomalos

Background: Despite the demonstrated benefits of insulin therapy, many general practitioners (GPs) are hesitant to administer it due to challenges such as a lack of knowledge, time constraints, and patient reluctance. The barriers that prevent a GP from initiating insulin therapy may vary in comparison to those encountered by a diabetic patient; this aspect of clinical research in the South Shanghai metropolitan area has received limited attention so far.
Objective: This is a 6-months of interventional analytic cohort study. The prime aim is to investigate the barriers general practitioners (GPs) face when initiating insulin therapy for patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D).
Materials and Methods: As part of a training program, all 189 registered GPs in Nanhui Health Service Center in Shanghai were given a structured online-multi-choice questionnaire before and after a six-month interval, during which the GPs received sessions of training on insulin therapy either on theoretic classes or clinical practices.
Results: Before and after training, via the methods of multiple-response analyses, the results showed that social, GP’s, and patient barriers to initiating insulin therapy were comparable. However, through the crosstabs chi-square test, we found significant changes in the basal insulin initiation following the prescription of the senior endocrinologists, the titration of insulin, and the need for training (p< 0.05). The Spearman analyses discovered significant changes associated with the cause of initial insulin refusal and the factors influencing insulin administration. Finally, the binary logistic regression analysis revealed that distinct causes such as social factors, insurance, GP experience, insulin dosage calculation, follow-up, and patients’ feelings are related to insulin treatment application before and after training.
Conclusion: According to this study, training increased general practitioners’ confidence in initiating insulin administration, especially basal insulin. General practitioners require additional education on insulin therapy, with a potential need for increased face-to-face training for insulin initiation.

Keywords: diabetes mellitus, insulin initiation barrier, general practitioner, community