已发表论文

2 型糖尿病患者对并发症的恐惧体验:一项定性研究

 

Authors Xiao Y, Song Z, Wei Z, Xie N , Wang Z

Received 5 June 2025

Accepted for publication 2 August 2025

Published 20 August 2025 Volume 2025:19 Pages 2553—2563

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S536379

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 2

Editor who approved publication: Dr Johnny Chen

Yuping Xiao,1 Zihao Song,2 Ziyi Wei,1 Nina Xie,1 Zhenzhen Wang1 

1School of Nursing, Shaanxi University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Xianyang, People’s Republic of China; 2Department of Clinical Medicine of Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine, the First Clinical Medical College of Shaanxi University of Chinese Medicine, Xianyang, People’s Republic of China

Correspondence: Zhenzhen Wang, School of Nursing, Shaanxi University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Xianyang, People’s Republic of China, Email wangzz2005@126.com

Introduction: Type 2 diabetes (T2DM) is a globally concerning chronic disease. Fear of complications (FoC) refers to a unique diabetes-related emotion among diabetic patients, arising from worries that complications may cause physical harm, which can affect blood glucose control. Therefore, it is crucial to comprehensively understand the factors influencing FoC and implement effective intervention plans.
Purpose: To understand the real experiences of patients with T2DM when facing the FoC, so as to provide a reference for implementing targeted nursing intervention measures to alleviate the patients’ psychological FoC.
Methods: Using the purposive sampling method, 16 patients with T2DM were selected as the research subjects from the Department of Endocrinology of a Class III Grade A hospital in Shaanxi Province from March to April 2025. A phenomenological research method was adopted to conduct semi-structured interviews with them. The Colaizzi’s seven-step analysis method was used to analyze the data and extract themes.
Results: A total of 3 themes and 9 sub-themes were extracted, including disease uncertainty (uncertainty in symptoms, uncertainty in management, uncertainty caused by medical staff sources, uncertainty caused by personal sources), social support (peer support, medical support, family support), and coping styles (acceptance and facing, evasion and submission).
Conclusion: The experience of FoC among patients with T2DM is complex and diverse. Medical staff should attach great importance to providing psychological counseling for these patients, eliminating their sense of uncertainty about the disease, offering professional guidance, and assisting in achieving multi-faceted support. This can help alleviate their experience of FoC and thus promote their physical and mental health.

Keywords: type 2 diabetes mellitus, fear of complications, stress coping theory, qualitative study