Results suggest that the current national survey item may not adequately measure cigar use. Accordingly, prevalence of cigar use among adolescents may be greatly underestimated, especially among Black youth.
Inclusion of BE in current measures of cigar product use may improve product use estimates in at-risk groups. However, better estimation of cigar product use may be accomplished by creating additional items to assess the use of subtypes of cigars.
Objective
To determine how medically uninsured patients with limited material resources successfully manage diabetes.
Methods
Clinicians at 5 safety net practices enrolled uninsured adult patients (N=26) with prior diagnosis of diabetes for 6 months or longer. Patients were interviewed about enabling factors, motivations, resources, and barriers. Chart reviews and clinician surveys supplemented interview data. Interview, survey, and chart review data were analyzed and findings were summarized.
Results
Two distinct groups of patients were investigated: 1) “successful,” defined as those with an HbA1c of ≤7% or a recent improvement of at least 2% (n=17); and 2) “unsuccessful,” defined as patients with HbA1c of ≥9% (n=9) without recent improvement. In comparison to unsuccessful patients, successful patients more often reported having friends or family with diabetes, sought information about the disease, used evidence-based self-management strategies, held an accurate perception of their own disease control, and experienced “turning point” events that motivated increased efforts in disease management.
Conclusions
Uninsured safety net patients who successfully managed diabetes learned from friends and family with diabetes and leveraged disease-related events into motivational turning points. It may be beneficial for clinicians to incorporate social learning and motivational enhancement into diabetes interventions to increase patients’ motivation for improved levels of self-management.
In this article we describe how patients assign meanings to medical test results and use these meanings to justify their actions. Evidence is presented from lay interpretations of medical tests for monitoring hepatitis C viral infection (HCV) to show how numeracy becomes embodied in the absence of physical symptoms. Illness narratives from 307 individuals infected with HCV were collected from the internet and analysed qualitatively. As part of standard medical care, chronically infected HCV patients are required to have periodic blood tests for laboratory testing. The lab results are presented numerically and compared with established physiological standards. HCV patients' knowledge and interpretations of test results have important consequences for their health behaviour and their medical decisions. In their stories, the patients described their decisions to begin, delay or stop treatment and developed strategies to alter their diet, exercise and use alternative therapies according to changes in their test result. The perceived meanings of test results are powerful signifiers that are capable of altering the course of HCV patients' illness, lives and stories. An interpretive model of health numeracy has the advantage of promoting understanding between patients and healthcare providers over a model that views innumeracy as a skill deficit.
Purpose
The “card study,” in which clinicians record brief information
about patient visits during usual clinical care, has long been a rapid method for
conducting descriptive studies in practice-based research networks (PBRNs). Since an
increasingly stringent regulatory environment has made conducting card studies
difficult, we developed a streamlined method for obtaining card study Institutional
Review Board (IRB) approval.
Methods
We developed a protocol for a study of the card study
method, allowing new card study proposals of specific
research questions to be submitted as addenda to the approved Card
Study Protocol.
Results
Seven card studies were proposed and approved under the Card Study Protocol
during the first year post implementation, contrasted with one card study proposed in
the previous year. New card study ideas submitted as addenda to an approved protocol
appeared to increase IRB comfort with the card study as a minimal risk method while
reducing the hurdles to developing new study ideas.
Conclusions
A Card Study Protocol allowing new study questions to be submitted as addenda
decreases time between idea generation and IRB approval. Shortened turn-around times may
be useful for translating ideas into action while reducing regulatory burden.
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