1
Evidence Synthesis
Student Name
Chamberlain College of Nursing
NR 716: Scientific Underpinnings
December 2023
, 2
Evidence Synthesis
Type 2 diabetes is a developing worldwide medical problem, influencing many
individuals worldwide, with a binding effect on medical services expenses and individual health
outcomes. This paper means to investigate the prevalence and financial consequences of type 2
diabetes in the United States and the potential advantages of using Motivational Interviewing
(MI) as a proof-based mediation for outward change in conduct. The motivation behind this
paper is to look at the adequacy of MI in working on self-administration, lessening HgbA1C
levels, and lightening diabetes-related pressure among people with type 2 diabetes.
Type 2 diabetes is a predominant condition in the United States, with almost 2,000,000
new judgments revealed yearly (ADA, 2019; CDC, n.d.; Mokdad et al., 2018). The monetary
weight related to dealing with the disease and its difficulties surpasses 300 million bucks every
year (ADA, 2019; Mokdad et al., 2018). Besides, type 2 diabetes can prompt serious unexpected
problems like kidney disease, hypertension, and visual impairment (ADA, 2019; CDC, n.d.;
Mokdad et al., 2018).
While traditional diabetic education and backing programs expect to advance a solid
way of life and behavior, their support rates stay low, with just 25% of the diabetic populace
participating in these mediations (CDC, n.d.; ADA, 2019). Motivational Interviewing (MI), a
patient-focused directing methodology that underscores sympathy and cooperative objective
setting, has arisen as a promising mediation for conduct change in diabetes the board (Li et al.,
2020; Dogru et al., 2019; Young et al., 2020). MI means to conquer inner conflict and elevate
adherence to treatment plans, prompting work on self-administration and better health outcomes
(Dogru et al., 2019; Li et al., 2020; Young et al., 2020).
Evidence Synthesis
Student Name
Chamberlain College of Nursing
NR 716: Scientific Underpinnings
December 2023
, 2
Evidence Synthesis
Type 2 diabetes is a developing worldwide medical problem, influencing many
individuals worldwide, with a binding effect on medical services expenses and individual health
outcomes. This paper means to investigate the prevalence and financial consequences of type 2
diabetes in the United States and the potential advantages of using Motivational Interviewing
(MI) as a proof-based mediation for outward change in conduct. The motivation behind this
paper is to look at the adequacy of MI in working on self-administration, lessening HgbA1C
levels, and lightening diabetes-related pressure among people with type 2 diabetes.
Type 2 diabetes is a predominant condition in the United States, with almost 2,000,000
new judgments revealed yearly (ADA, 2019; CDC, n.d.; Mokdad et al., 2018). The monetary
weight related to dealing with the disease and its difficulties surpasses 300 million bucks every
year (ADA, 2019; Mokdad et al., 2018). Besides, type 2 diabetes can prompt serious unexpected
problems like kidney disease, hypertension, and visual impairment (ADA, 2019; CDC, n.d.;
Mokdad et al., 2018).
While traditional diabetic education and backing programs expect to advance a solid
way of life and behavior, their support rates stay low, with just 25% of the diabetic populace
participating in these mediations (CDC, n.d.; ADA, 2019). Motivational Interviewing (MI), a
patient-focused directing methodology that underscores sympathy and cooperative objective
setting, has arisen as a promising mediation for conduct change in diabetes the board (Li et al.,
2020; Dogru et al., 2019; Young et al., 2020). MI means to conquer inner conflict and elevate
adherence to treatment plans, prompting work on self-administration and better health outcomes
(Dogru et al., 2019; Li et al., 2020; Young et al., 2020).