Association between family behaviors and self-care activities among type-II diabetes mellitus patients at a teaching hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal

J Educ Health Promot. 2022 Jan 31:11:25. doi: 10.4103/jehp.jehp_25_21. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Background: Self-care activities are associated with prognosis of type-II diabetes mellitus patients and include medication adherence, dietary adherence, physical activity, self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG), and appropriate foot care. The behaviors of a patient's family members can influence the patient's self-care activities, but little data exist on this association. The objective of this study was to assess the extent of the association between behaviors of family members of Type-II diabetes patients and the patients' self-care activities.

Materials and methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study at a teaching hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal, and interviewed 411 outpatients with Type-2 diabetes mellitus. We used exploratory factor analysis to group family members' behaviors into 3 domains ("authoritarian," "supportive," and "planning" behaviors) and graded the level of the behavior into 3 categories ("high" vs. "medium" vs. "low") according to its ranking distribution in each domain. We assessed the association between domains of family behavior and self-care activities using multivariate logistic regression with Bonferroni correction.

Results: High (vs. low) level of supportive behavior was associated with compliance to SMBG (58% vs. 11%; adjusted odds ratio [OR] =7.44; 95% confidence interval [CI] =2.41, 23.01). High (vs. low) level of planning behavior was associated with high level of foot care adherence (64% vs. 21%; adjusted OR = 6.03; 95% CI = 3.01, 12.11).

Conclusions: We found associations between behaviors of diabetes patients' family members and the patients' own self-care behaviors. However, the incongruence between the family behavior measurement questions and the self-care of interest limited the implications of the findings.

Keywords: Family behaviors; Nepal; health behaviors; self-care activities; type-II diabetes.