• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Self-care is Renouncement, Routine, and Control: The Experience of Adults with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
  • Contributor: Luciani, Michela; Montali, Lorenzo; Nicolò, Gabriella; Fabrizi, Diletta; Di Mauro, Stefania; Ausili, Davide
  • Published: SAGE Publications, 2021
  • Published in: Clinical Nursing Research, 30 (2021) 6, Seite 892-900
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1177/1054773820969540
  • ISSN: 1552-3799; 1054-7738
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus can cause serious complications; it has a severe impact on the quality of life and high costs. One of the key strategies to manage diabetes is self-care, a complex multifactorial process influenced by personal, cultural, and systemic factors, that comprises self-care maintenance, self-care monitoring, and self-care management. Few patients perform adequate self-care. To deepen our understanding of patients’ experiences of self-care maintenance, self-care monitoring, and self-care management, we conducted the first qualitative study on this topic. This study used Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis, informed by the Middle-range Theory of Self-care of Chronic Illness, to explore the experience and meaning of self-care maintenance, self-care monitoring, and self-care management in adults with T2DM (n = 10). Three themes were identified: self-care is renouncement, self-care is routine, and self-care is control. A cross-cutting moral pattern connects the three themes. Our findings corroborate the Middle-range Theory of Self-care of Chronic Illness in the field of diabetes self-care and could inform practitioners in understanding the experience of self-care as a complex phenomenon and in developing tailored interventions.