Diabetes Self-Management Activities

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Rapid Critical Appraisal for Self-Management Activities of Caregiving Grandmothers
Sagar Koradia
Davenport University

Compare the Diabetes Self-Management Activities. The purpose of this article is to compare the diabetes self-management activities of African American primary Caregiving grandmothers before and after the initiation of Caregiving and to compare the diabetes self-management activities of African American primary Caregiving grandmothers for diabetic women who were not caring for their grandchildren (Carthron, Johnson, Hubbart, Strickland, Nance, 2010, p. 330). This study was performed in Central Arkansas. A research study was conducted using 106 diabetic African-American women from four counties
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One group had 34 Caregiving participants between the age of 54 to 74 and the other group had 34 non-Caregiving participants between the age of 55 to 75. This study was used to compare the diabetes self-management activities of African American between primary Caregiving grandmothers and non-caring grandmothers. For this study, there was a comparative design used to examine differences in Caregiving grandmothers’ diabetic self-management activities and after the initiation of primary Caregiving for their grandchildren and to compare the self-management activities of diabetic African American primary Caregiving grandmothers for diabetic African American women who are not caregivers. In total, there were 68 subjects that participated of which 34 were caregivers and 34 were in …show more content…
The results also showed there were no significant differences in age, financial status, education, or status of health insurance status among Caregiving group and non-Caregiving group. The research study showed a difference in the number of eye examinations and blood glucose tests per year between the two groups. The length of Caregiving for the Caregiving group ranged from 1 to 3 years. Based on the study, researchers found that the age of grandchildren ranged from 14 months to 17 years, and numbers of grandchildren ranged from 1 to 4 (Carthron et al.,2010, p. 333). There was a recall bias noted in the article because during the first questionnaires in which all participants were “Self-Reported” type 2