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Original articles

Practice nurses’ role and knowledge about diabetes management within rural and remote Australian general practices

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Pages 55-62 | Received 03 Dec 2009, Accepted 01 Apr 2010, Published online: 17 Feb 2015
 

Abstract

Background: The increasing prevalence of diabetes and obesity represents a significant disease burden in Australia. Practice nurses (PNs) play an important role in diabetes education and management.

Aim: To explore PNs’ roles, knowledge and beliefs about diabetes education and management in rural and remote general practice in Australia.

Method: Exploratory study undertaken in three phases: 1) Pilot study to test the performance of the questionnaire; 2) One-shot cross-sectional survey using self-complete questionnaires; 3) Individual interviews.

Results: Ten PNs completed the pilot test; the draft questionnaire was deemed appropriate to the study purpose. Then, 65 questionnaires were distributed to PNs and 21 responded. Fourteen respondents had worked in the role <5 years, and most PNs attended diabetes education programmes in their workplace. A minority (40%) used diabetes management guidelines regularly. Most knew obesity to be the most common risk factor for diabetes but only 50% knew that glycosylated haemoglobin indicates blood glucose levels over the preceding three months. Self-reported competency to assess patients’ self-care practices and medication management practices varied.

Conclusion: PNs’ diabetes management was self-reported; their knowledge varied and their perceived benefits of diabetes education differed from those of patients.

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