The Diabetes Educator

 

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The Diabetes Educator, Vol. 34, No. 1, 109-117 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0145721707312398


FEATURES

The Art and Science of Diabetes Education

A Culture Out of Balance

Robert M. Anderson, EdD and Martha M. Funnell, MS, RN, CDE

From the Department of Medical Education, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor.

Correspondence to Robert M. Anderson, EdD, Department of Medical Education, University of Michigan Medical School, G1116 Towsley/Box 0201, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0201 (boba{at}umich.edu).

In the past 20 years, behavioral science has helped create a growing body of theoretically derived, evidenced-based approaches to diabetes patient education. Health care professionals in all disciplines are being required to demonstrate that their practice is evidence based. For diabetes educators, behavioral science is the source of much of that evidence. However, effective diabetes education involves a combination of art and science. Establishing a therapeutic alliance with patients is an art. Diabetes educators must have the interpersonal skills, values, and personal traits needed to cultivate relationships with patients that are characterized by trust, respect, and acceptance. They must feel and be able to express compassion, empathy, and warmth. However, if someone outside the field were reviewing diabetes education evaluation research, they would probably conclude that diabetes educators are interchangeable cogs in a wheel. The positive impact of the therapeutic alliance is well documented in the counseling, psychotherapy, education, and nursing literature. However, evidence to support the important role of the diabetes educator's values, interpersonal skills, and ability to establish a therapeutic alliance with patients is absent from that literature. Valid and reliable measures used to document the impact of interpersonal skills counselors and teachers could be used in diabetes education with little or no adaptation. The evidence and tools exist; we now need to determine if the will exists.



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