Objective To investigate the current status of insulin injection among patients with diabetes in a county-level community through questionnaires and to implement a targeted special quality management (QM) program based on the findings. Methods Using a one-group pre-post study design, 297 patients receiving insulin injections were randomly selected from the local community’s chronic disease management database. A baseline insulin injection-related questionnaire survey was conducted. A multidisciplinary collaborative management team (MCMT) was established to analyze the results and implement a structured special QM program. The team developed an insulin injection quality evaluation system and carried out interventions including systematic health education, standardized operation training, and regular quality supervision with feedback. After a one-year QM period, a second questionnaire survey was administered. To assess the sustainability of the intervention effects, a follow-up evaluation was conducted 6 months after the completion of the QM program (i.e., at 18 months from baseline), using the same questionnaire and HbA1c measurement. These data will be reported in a subsequent analysis to determine whether improvements in knowledge, injection practices, and glycemic control were maintained over time. Baseline data were also indirectly compared with recent international Insulin Injection Technique Questionnaire (ITQ) data for contextualization. Results After the QM intervention, significant improvements were observed in knowledge and operational levels concerning diabetes, insulin, insulin storage, and insulin injection ( p 0.05). Glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels decreased from 7.13% (SD = 1.74%) at baseline to 5.93% (SD = 1.00%) post-intervention, with a mean reduction of 1.20% (95% CI, 0.98–1.42%, t = 10.54, p 0.001), indicating a statistically and clinically significant improvement. Conclusion Addressing insulin injection problems identified in the county community through establishing a targeted special QM program is beneficial for improving diabetes control and management at the community level.
Lou et al. (Wed,) studied this question.