Service user experiences of a nationally implemented diabetes prevention programme in England: a qualitative interview study
Pippa Higgs, Rhiannon E. Hawkes, Lisa M. Miles, Charlotte Dack, David P. French

TL;DR
This study explores how people in England experienced a national diabetes prevention program, highlighting the importance of mindset shifts and social support.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the user experiences of a large-scale diabetes prevention program in England.
Findings
Participants experienced a mindset shift towards diabetes and their behaviors.
Lack of content tailoring affected participants' experiences negatively.
Group sessions and social support were crucial for engagement and behavior change.
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is a chronic condition linked to obesity that affects millions of people within England. Behaviour change interventions implemented worldwide targeting weight loss have been effective in preventing T2D. In response to this, the NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme (NHS-DPP) was introduced in 2016, and was the first initiative in England to implement a diabetes prevention programme at scale. The current study investigates service users’ experiences of attending in-person sessions of the NHS-DPP when the programme was first rolled out. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with service users (n = 20) after they completed the programme. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed using a framework approach to thematic analysis. Three themes were produced. Mindset Shift: whilst the participants did not always maintain their behaviour changes, they experienced…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health and Patient Involvement · Diabetes Management and Education · Community Health and Development
