1 型糖尿病青少年患者 HbA1C 与糖尿病自我管理舒适度的关系

Obichi Onwukwe, E. Lundgrin
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摘要

患有 1 型糖尿病(T1D)的青少年和年轻成人(AYA)是一个易受伤害的群体,在他们接管糖尿病管理的时候,有可能出现血糖结果不达标的情况。本研究的目的是考察 T1D 患者中的青壮年对糖尿病管理任务的自述舒适度,并描述舒适度、社会人口因素和 HbA1c 之间的关系。在一次常规糖尿病就诊中,15-23 岁的 T1D 患者接受了一项过渡调查,以自我评估他们对不同糖尿病管理任务的舒适度。在完成调查的 161 名参与者(中位数年龄 17 岁,中位数糖尿病病程 7 年,82.3% 白人,40.9% 女性,66.5% 有私人保险,中位数 HbA1c 8.8%)中,无论种族或保险类型如何,他们对糖尿病管理任务的舒适度普遍评价较高(总体舒适度中位数为 4.5(满分 5 分))。回归分析表明,在控制年龄、性别、种族、保险类型和糖尿病病程后,自我报告的糖尿病管理任务舒适度越高,HbA1c 越高(p = 0.006)。这些研究结果表明,在评估青壮年患者从儿童糖尿病护理过渡到成人糖尿病护理期间是否需要进一步干预以优化血糖结果时,自我报告的独立管理 T1D 的舒适度可能并不是一个充分的指标,这也凸显了在这一过渡时期持续护理以支持糖尿病管理的重要性。
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Association of HbA1C and comfort with diabetes self-management among adolescents and young adults with type 1 diabetes
Adolescents and young adults (AYA) living with type 1 diabetes (T1D) are a vulnerable demographic at risk for sub-optimal glycemic outcomes at a time when they are taking over their diabetes management. The purposes of this study were to examine levels of self-reported comfort with diabetes management tasks among AYA living with T1D and to describe the relationships among comfort levels, sociodemographic factors, and HbA1c. During a routine diabetes care visit, AYA aged 15–23 years old living with T1D received a transition survey to self-assess their comfort level with different diabetesmanagement tasks. Among 161 participants who completed the survey (median age 17 years, median diabetes duration 7 years, 82.3% White, 40.9% female, 66.5% with private insurance, and median HbA1c 8.8%), comfort with diabetes management tasks was generally rated highly (median overall comfort level of 4.5 out of 5), irrespective of race or insurance type. Regression analysis revealed that higher self-reported comfort level with diabetes management tasks was associated with a higher HbA1c (p = 0.006), after controlling for age, sex, race, insurance type, and diabetes duration. These findings suggest that self-reported comfort with independently managing T1D may not be a sufficient metric in assessing AYA patients’ need for further intervention to optimize glycemic outcomes as they transition from pediatric to adult diabetes care, and highlights the importance of continuity of care to support diabetes management during this transitional period.
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