Primary care providers’ perspectives on the implementation of couple-based collaborative management for Chinese older adults with type 2 diabetes: a mixed-methods study

Publication
Frontiers in Public Health

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Couple-based collaborative management (CCMM) has shown promise in supporting chronic disease self-management among older adults and addressing the growing public health burden, but its integration into primary care remains uncertain. This study explored primary care providers’ (PCPs) perceptions of CCMM using normalization process theory (NPT) to identify key factors influencing its routine implementation.

METHODS: Thirty five PCPs involved in a community-based randomized controlled trial completed the Normalization Measure Development (NoMAD) questionnaire. Descriptive statistics and Cronbach’s alpha were used to assess quantitative data. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with five purposively selected PCPs and were analyzed thematically according to NPT constructs.

RESULTS: PCPs reported high familiarity with CCMM (mean = 8.03, SD = 1.36) and positive views regarding its potential integration into practice. Mean scores for the four NPT constructs ranged from 1.76 to 2.47, and internal consistency of the NoMAD was strong (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.94). PCPs recognized CCMM as distinct from usual practice and valued its relevance (coherence), which encouraged engagement (cognitive participation). However, barriers included heavy workloads, staff shortages, limited confidence in some clinical tasks, challenges in sustaining continuity, and concerns about patient adherence and couple relationships. These factors hindered collective action and reflexive monitoring.

CONCLUSION: PCPs understood and supported CCMM conceptually and expressed willingness to adopt it, yet structural and organizational barriers limited its practical implementation. Implementing CCMM in primary care could improve chronic disease management and promote healthy aging. Addressing workload pressures, enhancing provider training, and ensuring continuity will be essential to normalize CCMM in primary care.

KEYWORDS: couple-based collaborative management, implementation science, normalization process theory, primary care, type 2 diabete

Yingxin Xu
Yingxin Xu
Master in Epidemiology and Health Statistics

the dynamic patterns of cognitive decline and physical frailty

Conghui Yang
Conghui Yang
Master of Science in Epidemiology and Biostatistics, 2020-2023

couple-based intervention for Chinese older adults with type 2 diabetes

Jingyi Zhi
Jingyi Zhi
Master in Epidemiology and Health Statistics

design and evaluation of strategies for the early prevention and intervention management of dementia

Huiqiong Zheng
Huiqiong Zheng
Master of Science in Epidemiology and Biostatistics, 2020-2023

couple-based collaborative management model for chronic diseases

Qiao Liu
Qiao Liu
Research assistant of Science in Epidemiology and Biostatistics

chronic illness management

Jing Liao
Jing Liao
Associate professor, Department of Medical Statistics & Epidemiology| SYSU Global Health Institute (SGHI), Sun Yat-sen University, China

Healthy ageing dynamics, examining social networks × health behaviors × multidimensional functioning (physical/cognitive/social). Uses longitudinal cohort modeling (global datasets) to pinpoint socio-determinants, with RCT-validated interventions.