Global Qualitative Nursing Research (Mar 2016)

Exploring Cultural Influences of Self-Management of Diabetes in Coastal Kenya

  • Munib Said Abdulrehman,
  • Wendy Woith,
  • Sheryl Jenkins,
  • Susan Kossman,
  • Gina Louise Hunter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2333393616641825
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3

Abstract

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In spite of increasing prevalence of diabetes among Kenyans and evidence suggesting Kenyans with diabetes maintain poor glycemic control, no one has examined the role of cultural attitudes, beliefs, and practices in their self-management of diabetes. The purpose of this ethnographic study was to describe diabetes self-management among the Swahili of coastal Kenya, and explore factors that affect diabetes self-management within the context of Swahili culture. Thirty men and women with type 2 diabetes from Lamu town, Kenya, participated in this study. Diabetes self-management was insufficiently practiced, and participants had limited understanding of diabetes. Economic factors such as poverty and the high cost of biomedical care appear to have more influence in self-management behavior than socio-cultural and educational factors do. Economic and socio-cultural influences on diabetes self-management should not be underestimated, especially in a limited resource environment like coastal Kenya, where biomedical care is not accessible or affordable to all.