Cultural adaptation of a patient decision-aid for insulin therapy

Introduction: Patient decision-aids (PDAs) support patients in selecting evidence-based treatment options. PDA is useful only if the user understands the content to make personalised decisions. Cultural adaptation is a process of adjusting health messages so that the information is accurate, relevan...

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Main Authors: Tan, Ngiap Chuan, Koong, Agnes Ying Leng, Phoon, Ian Kwong Yun, Wang, Sinead Zhen, Muthulakshmi, Paulpandi, Lee, Yew Kong, Furler, John, Car, Josip, Ng, Chirk Jenn
Other Authors: Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148619
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1486192023-03-05T16:49:03Z Cultural adaptation of a patient decision-aid for insulin therapy Tan, Ngiap Chuan Koong, Agnes Ying Leng Phoon, Ian Kwong Yun Wang, Sinead Zhen Muthulakshmi, Paulpandi Lee, Yew Kong Furler, John Car, Josip Ng, Chirk Jenn Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Science::Medicine Patient Decision-aids Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Introduction: Patient decision-aids (PDAs) support patients in selecting evidence-based treatment options. PDA is useful only if the user understands the content to make personalised decisions. Cultural adaptation is a process of adjusting health messages so that the information is accurate, relevant and understandable to users from a different population. A PDA has been developed to assist Malaysian patients with secondary drug failure to initiate insulin therapy to control their type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Likewise, patients with T2DM in neighbouring Singapore face similar barriers in commencing insulin treatment, which a PDA may facilitate decision-making in selecting personalised therapy. Objective: The study aimed to explore the views and perceptions of Singaporean primary care providers on the Malaysia PDA to initiate insulin therapy and described the cultural adaptation process used in the design and development of a new PDA, which would be trialled in a Singapore primary healthcare institution. Method: Qualitative research method was deployed to conduct one-to-one in-depth interviews of the healthcare providers at the trial site (SingHealth Polyclinics—SHP), including six primary care physicians and four nurses to gather their views and feedbacks on the Malaysian PDA. The interviews were transcribed, audited and analysed (standard content analysis) to identify themes relating to the content, layout, concerns of the original PDA and suggestions to the design of the new SHP PDA. Results: Cultural adaptation of the new PDA includes change to the overall design, graphics (including pictograms), presentation styles, additional contextualised content (personalisation, subheadings, cost and treatment option), modified phrasing of the subtitles and concerns (choice of words) relevant to the new users. Conclusion: A PDA on insulin therapy underwent cultural adaptation before its implementation in another population in a neighbouring country. Its relevance and effectiveness will be evaluated in future research. National Medical Research Council (NMRC) Published version The study is sponsored by Singapore National Medical Research Council Health Services Research Grant (NMRC/HSRG/0082/2017). 2021-05-12T06:24:51Z 2021-05-12T06:24:51Z 2020 Journal Article Tan, N. C., Koong, A. Y. L., Phoon, I. K. Y., Wang, S. Z., Muthulakshmi, P., Lee, Y. K., Furler, J., Car, J. & Ng, C. J. (2020). Cultural adaptation of a patient decision-aid for insulin therapy. BMJ Open, 10(3). https://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2019-033791 2044-6055 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148619 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-033791 32152165 2-s2.0-85081626182 3 10 en NMRC/HSRG/0082/2017 BMJ Open © 2020 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Medicine
Patient Decision-aids
Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
spellingShingle Science::Medicine
Patient Decision-aids
Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
Tan, Ngiap Chuan
Koong, Agnes Ying Leng
Phoon, Ian Kwong Yun
Wang, Sinead Zhen
Muthulakshmi, Paulpandi
Lee, Yew Kong
Furler, John
Car, Josip
Ng, Chirk Jenn
Cultural adaptation of a patient decision-aid for insulin therapy
description Introduction: Patient decision-aids (PDAs) support patients in selecting evidence-based treatment options. PDA is useful only if the user understands the content to make personalised decisions. Cultural adaptation is a process of adjusting health messages so that the information is accurate, relevant and understandable to users from a different population. A PDA has been developed to assist Malaysian patients with secondary drug failure to initiate insulin therapy to control their type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Likewise, patients with T2DM in neighbouring Singapore face similar barriers in commencing insulin treatment, which a PDA may facilitate decision-making in selecting personalised therapy. Objective: The study aimed to explore the views and perceptions of Singaporean primary care providers on the Malaysia PDA to initiate insulin therapy and described the cultural adaptation process used in the design and development of a new PDA, which would be trialled in a Singapore primary healthcare institution. Method: Qualitative research method was deployed to conduct one-to-one in-depth interviews of the healthcare providers at the trial site (SingHealth Polyclinics—SHP), including six primary care physicians and four nurses to gather their views and feedbacks on the Malaysian PDA. The interviews were transcribed, audited and analysed (standard content analysis) to identify themes relating to the content, layout, concerns of the original PDA and suggestions to the design of the new SHP PDA. Results: Cultural adaptation of the new PDA includes change to the overall design, graphics (including pictograms), presentation styles, additional contextualised content (personalisation, subheadings, cost and treatment option), modified phrasing of the subtitles and concerns (choice of words) relevant to the new users. Conclusion: A PDA on insulin therapy underwent cultural adaptation before its implementation in another population in a neighbouring country. Its relevance and effectiveness will be evaluated in future research.
author2 Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
author_facet Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Tan, Ngiap Chuan
Koong, Agnes Ying Leng
Phoon, Ian Kwong Yun
Wang, Sinead Zhen
Muthulakshmi, Paulpandi
Lee, Yew Kong
Furler, John
Car, Josip
Ng, Chirk Jenn
format Article
author Tan, Ngiap Chuan
Koong, Agnes Ying Leng
Phoon, Ian Kwong Yun
Wang, Sinead Zhen
Muthulakshmi, Paulpandi
Lee, Yew Kong
Furler, John
Car, Josip
Ng, Chirk Jenn
author_sort Tan, Ngiap Chuan
title Cultural adaptation of a patient decision-aid for insulin therapy
title_short Cultural adaptation of a patient decision-aid for insulin therapy
title_full Cultural adaptation of a patient decision-aid for insulin therapy
title_fullStr Cultural adaptation of a patient decision-aid for insulin therapy
title_full_unstemmed Cultural adaptation of a patient decision-aid for insulin therapy
title_sort cultural adaptation of a patient decision-aid for insulin therapy
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148619
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