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Evaluation of the Impact of a Diabetes Education Curriculum for School Personnel on Disease Knowledge and Confidence in Caring for Students
Authors:Cory T Smith  Aleda M H Chen  Kimberly S Plake  Christiane L Nash
Affiliation:Clinical Assistant Professor, (ctsmith@purdue.edu), Department of Pharmacy Practice, Purdue University, Heine Pharmacy Building, 575 Stadium Mall Drive, West Lafayette, IN 47907. Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Practice, (amchen@cedarville.edu), Department of Pharmacy Practice, Cedarville University, 251 N. Main Street, Cedarville, OH 45314. Associate Professor, (kplake@purdue.edu), Department of Pharmacy Practice, Faculty Associate, Center on Aging and the Life Course, Faculty Associate, Regenstrief Center for Healthcare Engineering, Purdue University, Heine Pharmacy Building, 575 Stadium Mall Drive, West Lafayette, IN 47907. Associate Director of Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experience, (clnash@purdue.edu), Clinical Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Practice, Purdue University, Heine Pharmacy Building, 575 Stadium Mall Drive, West Lafayette, IN 47907.
Abstract:BACKGROUND: School personnel may lack knowledge of diabetes and be unprepared to address the needs of students with type 1 diabetes. This project evaluated the effectiveness of a type 1 diabetes education program for school personnel on increasing knowledge of diabetes and confidence in caring for students with diabetes. METHODS: Two types of diabetes education programs were created for school personnel. The basic program provided a 60-minute overview of diabetes. The expanded program, intended for volunteer health aides, provided participants with a more in-depth overview of diabetes during a 180-minute session, including demonstrations of how to assist students with insulin injections. Instruments were created to assess changes in diabetes-related knowledge and confidence in caring for students. Separate knowledge instruments were created for the basic and expanded programs. Knowledge instruments were administered before and after delivery of the education programs to both groups. Confidence instruments were administered before and after for persons completing the expanded program. RESULTS: A total of 81 school personnel participated in the basic (N = 44) or expanded programs (N = 37). Overall knowledge regarding diabetes significantly increased in both the basic and expanded programs from baseline (p < .001). Confidence in caring for students with diabetes also increased from pretest to posttest, both for overall confidence and each individual item (p < .001). CONCLUSIONS: Educational programs offered for school personnel can lead to increased knowledge and increased confidence in caring for students with diabetes, which may assist school personnel in addressing the needs of students with diabetes.
Keywords:diabetes confidence  diabetes knowledge  education program  schools
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