PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Amanda Jane Elliott AU - Fiona Harris AU - Sandra G Laird TI - Patients’ beliefs on the impediments to good diabetes control: a mixed methods study of patients in general practice AID - 10.3399/bjgp16X687589 DP - 2016 Dec 01 TA - British Journal of General Practice PG - e913--e919 VI - 66 IP - 653 4099 - http://bjgp.org/content/66/653/e913.short 4100 - http://bjgp.org/content/66/653/e913.full SO - Br J Gen Pract2016 Dec 01; 66 AB - Background Most people with diabetes are not attaining desirable levels of HbA1c (glycated haemoglobin), or of blood pressure and cholesterol, leaving them at risk of developing complications.Aim To identify ways of improving diabetes control by gaining insight into patients’ attitudes/beliefs.Design and setting Questionnaires were offered to patients attending for a diabetes review in the 24 GP practices of North East Hampshire and Farnham Clinical Commissioning Group.Method Infrequent attenders were contacted by post. Volunteers then participated in focus groups.Results Self-reported medication adherence was good with 83% (98/118) of responders recording ≥9 on a 10-point scale. Patients generally accepted they ‘needed’ and ‘could take’ medication. A substantial minority reported ‘not liking’ taking tablets. Focus groups confirmed this and revealed a reluctance to change lifestyle, with medication reported as a way to evade it. A total of 68 out of 112 responders (60.7%) knew their HbA1c value. However, focus groups identified little understanding of HbA1c, with responders perceiving it as medical jargon. Phrases such as ‘stuck-on-sugar’ or ‘sugarload’ were suggested as being semantically easier to understand. The questionnaire revealed trust in clinicians. This was confirmed in focus groups but confounded by frequent reports of healthcare providers giving inadequate/incorrect advice.Conclusion Investment in lifestyle change is needed. Participants were reluctant to change and saw medication as a way of avoiding it. HbA1c needs to be better explained. Intuitive phrases such as ‘stuck-on-sugar’ or ‘sugarload’ could be adopted into common parlance. Inadequate/incorrect advice seems to be hampering diabetes management and there appears to be a need for more diabetes-trained clinicians.