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Associations between major life events and adherence, glycemic control, and psychosocial characteristics in teens with type 1 diabetes.

Citation
Commissariat, P., et al. “Associations Between Major Life Events And Adherence, Glycemic Control, And Psychosocial Characteristics In Teens With Type 1 Diabetes.”. Pediatric Diabetes, pp. 85-91.
Center Joslin Diabetes Center
Author Persis Commissariat V, Lisa K Volkening, Zijing Guo, Jessica L ElBach, Deborah A Butler, Lori M Laffel
Keywords adolescent, hemoglobin A1c, life change events, patient adherence, type 1 diabetes mellitus
Abstract

AIMS: This cross-sectional study assessed the type of major life events occurring in a contemporary sample of teens with type 1 diabetes and the association between event frequency and demographic, diabetes management, and psychosocial characteristics.

METHODS: Parents of 178 teens completed the Life Events Checklist to report major events teens had experienced in the last year: 42% experienced 0 to 1 event (n = 75), 32% experienced 2 to 3 events (n = 57), and 26% experienced 4+ events (n = 46). Teens and parents completed validated measures of treatment adherence, diabetes-specific self-efficacy, quality of life, and diabetes-specific family conflict. Parent-youth interview and chart review provided demographics and diabetes management data.

RESULTS: Mean number of events/teen was 2.6 ± 2.7 (range = 0-15). The most common events were "Hospitalization of a family member" (24%), "Getting a bad report card" (20%), "Serious arguments between parents" (19%), and "Serious illness/injury in a family member" (19%). Compared with teens experiencing 0 to 1 event, teens experiencing 4+ events were less likely to have married parents (P = .01) and a parent with a college degree (P = .006). Teens with 4+ events had significantly poorer adherence (P = .002 teen, P = .02 parent), lower self-efficacy (P = .03 teen, P < .0001 parent), poorer quality of life (P < .0001 teen, P < .0001 parent), and more conflict (P = .006 teen, P = .02 parent) than teens with fewer events. In a multivariate model (R  = 0.21, P < .0001) controlling for demographic and diabetes management characteristics, fewer events was associated with lower A1c (P = .0009).

CONCLUSIONS: Occurrence of more major life events was associated with poorer diabetes care and A1c and more negative psychosocial qualities in teens with type 1 diabetes.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Pediatric diabetes
Volume
19
Issue
1
Number of Pages
85-91
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1399-5448
DOI
10.1111/pedi.12523
Alternate Journal
Pediatr Diabetes
PMID
28425183
PMCID
PMC5648628
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