心理学
发展心理学
医学
2型糖尿病
糖尿病
内分泌学
作者
Carla L. Fisher,Michaela D. Mullis,Donghee N. Lee,Christy J. W. Ledford
摘要
How families function and provide support plays a central role in patients' self-management of Type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and prediabetes (preDM). Families would benefit from communication training, which is rarely incorporated into diabetes self-management education (DSME). Mothers are especially in need of this support. Women are at a higher risk of T2DM, and when mothers are patients, they can prioritize their family role and family's well-being over their personal needs as a patient.To identify family communication that affects mothers' ability to self-manage T2DM/preDM, we interviewed 17 mothers aged 36-64 (M = 56). Transcripts were thematically analyzed.Women described four family communication experiences affecting self-care: (a) family-of-origin communication (e.g., weight/diet messages during childhood), (b) communal coping communication (e.g., adopting healthy behaviors as a family), (c) communication inhibiting communal coping (e.g., negative response to mothers' lifestyle changes), and (d) mothers taking the lead (e.g., leading conversations or communicating control over family's lifestyle decisions).Findings highlight the need for a family systems approach to DSME. Communication from multiple bonds (e.g., spouse, children) and past family-of-origin experiences impact self-care. Communal coping (appraising diabetes as "our" problem) was critical to self-management as mothers struggled to balance their needs with family members' preferences/attitudes. When not supported, mothers who took the lead communicatively could facilitate communal coping or prioritize self-care needs. Findings can inform a family-centered approach to DSME that highlights the importance of communal coping, provides all members communication skills training, and addresses the need for mothers to prioritize personal well-being. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
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