A survey conducted at a Veterans Administration Hospital to evaluate patient capability for self-management found that over 35 per cent of the patients interviewed lacked any formal training. Seventeen patients had been placed on insulin without formal instruction. Almost one half the patients who claimed to have attended training programs could not demonstrate adequate knowledge or skills in any of the major areas of self-care: insulin administration, urine testing, diet, foot care, and management of hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia. While patients with training were more knowledgeable than patients without training, the difference was slight. The results indicate the need for systematic analysis of patient knowledge and the evaluation of training programs on a continuing basis.
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Original Articles|
September 01 1978
Evaluation of Patients' Knowledge of Diabetes Self-Care
Leona V Miller;
Leona V Miller
Department of Medicine, California College of Medicine, University of California
Irvine, and the Veterans Administration Hospital, Long Beach, California
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Jack Goldstein;
Jack Goldstein
Department of Medicine, California College of Medicine, University of California
Irvine, and the Veterans Administration Hospital, Long Beach, California
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Gary Nicolaisen
Gary Nicolaisen
Department of Medicine, California College of Medicine, University of California
Irvine, and the Veterans Administration Hospital, Long Beach, California
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1
G. Nicolaisen's present address is School of Medicine, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee.
Address reprint requests to Leona Miller, 1485 Kenmore Road, Pasadena, California 91106.
Citation
Leona V Miller, Jack Goldstein, Gary Nicolaisen; Evaluation of Patients' Knowledge of Diabetes Self-Care. Diabetes Care 1 September 1978; 1 (5): 275–280. https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.1.5.275
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