Wavering Diabetic Diet: “I Break the Diet and Then I Feel Guilty and Then I Don’t Go Back to It, In Case I Feel Guilty Again”

This study aimed at understanding the experiences of maintaining good dietary self-care among people with type 2 diabetes mellitus and the meaning of negative emotions in the context of dietary self-care. Thirteen type 2 diabetes patients from an Endocrinology and Diabetes Department in the West Mid...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Margaret Amankwah-Poku
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-03-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244020914577
id doaj-7da64a703eb64642b4a89a26b76e3085
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7da64a703eb64642b4a89a26b76e30852020-11-25T03:31:52ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402020-03-011010.1177/2158244020914577Wavering Diabetic Diet: “I Break the Diet and Then I Feel Guilty and Then I Don’t Go Back to It, In Case I Feel Guilty Again”Margaret Amankwah-Poku0Department of Psychology, University of Ghana, Accra, GhanaThis study aimed at understanding the experiences of maintaining good dietary self-care among people with type 2 diabetes mellitus and the meaning of negative emotions in the context of dietary self-care. Thirteen type 2 diabetes patients from an Endocrinology and Diabetes Department in the West Midlands region, United Kingdom, were interviewed to explore experiences of dietary self-care and negative emotions. Transcripts were analyzed using the interpretative phenomenological analysis approach. Three main themes emerged: (a) dietary self-care: a constant challenge, (b) negative emotions: a cause and a consequence, and (c) coping with negative emotions and living with “the diet.” Situations involving poor dietary self-care were identified to understand the context of negative emotions. Perceived dietary restrictions resulted in frustration, anger, and depression, while maintaining dietary self-care resulted in irritation, annoyance, regret, guilt, anger, and depression. The consequence of poor dietary self-care was frustration, depression, and anger, which further resulted in poor dietary self-care, creating a cycle of poor dietary self-care and negative emotions. This reflected the wavering nature of participants’ dietary maintenance. Coping with these negative emotions and poor dietary self-care involved rationalizing and/or acknowledging the importance of maintaining good dietary self-care. Findings showed negative emotions are perceived to impact dietary self-care and diabetes control. Health care providers should incorporate the understanding of experiences of negative emotions in dietary education and cognitive behavioral interventions should be offered to manage negative emotions.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244020914577
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Margaret Amankwah-Poku
spellingShingle Margaret Amankwah-Poku
Wavering Diabetic Diet: “I Break the Diet and Then I Feel Guilty and Then I Don’t Go Back to It, In Case I Feel Guilty Again”
SAGE Open
author_facet Margaret Amankwah-Poku
author_sort Margaret Amankwah-Poku
title Wavering Diabetic Diet: “I Break the Diet and Then I Feel Guilty and Then I Don’t Go Back to It, In Case I Feel Guilty Again”
title_short Wavering Diabetic Diet: “I Break the Diet and Then I Feel Guilty and Then I Don’t Go Back to It, In Case I Feel Guilty Again”
title_full Wavering Diabetic Diet: “I Break the Diet and Then I Feel Guilty and Then I Don’t Go Back to It, In Case I Feel Guilty Again”
title_fullStr Wavering Diabetic Diet: “I Break the Diet and Then I Feel Guilty and Then I Don’t Go Back to It, In Case I Feel Guilty Again”
title_full_unstemmed Wavering Diabetic Diet: “I Break the Diet and Then I Feel Guilty and Then I Don’t Go Back to It, In Case I Feel Guilty Again”
title_sort wavering diabetic diet: “i break the diet and then i feel guilty and then i don’t go back to it, in case i feel guilty again”
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2020-03-01
description This study aimed at understanding the experiences of maintaining good dietary self-care among people with type 2 diabetes mellitus and the meaning of negative emotions in the context of dietary self-care. Thirteen type 2 diabetes patients from an Endocrinology and Diabetes Department in the West Midlands region, United Kingdom, were interviewed to explore experiences of dietary self-care and negative emotions. Transcripts were analyzed using the interpretative phenomenological analysis approach. Three main themes emerged: (a) dietary self-care: a constant challenge, (b) negative emotions: a cause and a consequence, and (c) coping with negative emotions and living with “the diet.” Situations involving poor dietary self-care were identified to understand the context of negative emotions. Perceived dietary restrictions resulted in frustration, anger, and depression, while maintaining dietary self-care resulted in irritation, annoyance, regret, guilt, anger, and depression. The consequence of poor dietary self-care was frustration, depression, and anger, which further resulted in poor dietary self-care, creating a cycle of poor dietary self-care and negative emotions. This reflected the wavering nature of participants’ dietary maintenance. Coping with these negative emotions and poor dietary self-care involved rationalizing and/or acknowledging the importance of maintaining good dietary self-care. Findings showed negative emotions are perceived to impact dietary self-care and diabetes control. Health care providers should incorporate the understanding of experiences of negative emotions in dietary education and cognitive behavioral interventions should be offered to manage negative emotions.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244020914577
work_keys_str_mv AT margaretamankwahpoku waveringdiabeticdietibreakthedietandthenifeelguiltyandthenidontgobacktoitincaseifeelguiltyagain
_version_ 1724571252694188032