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Barriers and enablers to optimal diabetes care for adults with learning disabilities: A systematic review

Accessible Summary

Adults with learning disabilities and diabetes are more likely to have health problems than people with diabetes who do not have learning disabilities.

This research had two aims. One was to find out what stops adults with learning disabilities from getting help with their diabetes. The other was to find out what things help them get the best care for their diabetes.

We found 12 things that stop adults with learning disabilities from getting good care for their diabetes and 14 things that help them get good care.

The findings from this research can be used to improve the lives of adults living with learning disabilities and diabetes.

Abstract

Background

Individuals with diabetes and a learning disability have poorer health outcomes than those without a learning disability. In the UK, the health inequalities faced by people with learning disabilities are often the result of barriers they face in accessing timely, appropriate and effective health care. The aim of the study was to

review relevant literature to identify the barriers and enablers to optimal diabetes care for adults with learning disabilities.

Methods

Systematic review methodology was used to answer the research question: What barriers and enablers to optimal diabetes care exist for adults with learning disabilities? This review is reported according to PRISMA guidelines. Key databases were searched using relevant terms. Included studies were synthesised using thematic analysis and were quality appraised.

Findings

This review identified 12 barriers to optimal diabetes care for adults with learning disabilities and 14 enablers to optimal care from 10 diverse publications. Low level of diabetes knowledge and understanding and systems that do not allow reasonable adjustments were the barriers considered to have the greatest reliability. The enabler identified to have the highest reliability was person‐centred planning and reasonable adjustments.

Conclusion

This work highlights key actions that can be undertaken to address inequalities in diabetes care for people with learning disabilities. With additional research in this field, further progress can be made to improve the lives of those adults living with learning disabilities and diabetes.

Read the full article ›

Posted in: Meta-analyses - Systematic Reviews on 06/08/2021 | Link to this post on IFP |
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