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Knowledge and Attitudes About Type 2 Diabetes Among Female Nursing Students in Saudi Arabia
Ist Teil von
World medical and health policy, 2022-03, Vol.14 (1), p.47-53
Ort / Verlag
Berlin: Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
Erscheinungsjahr
2022
Quelle
PAIS Index
Beschreibungen/Notizen
We evaluated current knowledge and attitudes about type 2 diabetes among female students pursuing nursing degrees at one university in Saudi Arabia in 2018–19. The majority of the 87 respondents were aware of risk factors for type 2 diabetes, such as obesity (95 percent) and age (93 percent). Most participants were also aware that diabetes can cause complications such as blindness (88 percent), kidney disease (77 percent), and heart disease (67 percent). However, only about half believed that type 2 diabetes is a very serious disease (47 percent), and many believed that people with diabetes who do not use insulin have mild disease (61 percent) and do not need to worry about long‐term complications (36 percent). Addressing these misperceptions, perhaps with education that combines the cognitive and affective domains, will prepare these rising professionals to provide better patient care in the coming years as Saudi Arabia seeks to reduce its epidemiological and economic burden from diabetes.
Key Takeaways
Saudi nursing students are knowledgeable about diabetes complications yet may not consider diabetes to be a serious disease.
Nurses who do not perceive diabetes to be a serious condition may be underprepared for clinical practice even if they are knowledgeable about the disease.
Health education that connects the cognitive and affective domains may close gaps between knowledge and perceptions.