Assessing the association of depression and anxiety with symptom reporting among individuals with type 2 diabetes.
| Citation | Asman, Arielle G, et al. “Assessing the Association of Depression and Anxiety With Symptom Reporting Among Individuals With Type 2 Diabetes”. 2020. Journal of Behavioral Medicine, vol. 43, no. 1, 2020, pp. 57–68.  | 
       
| Center | Albert Einstein College of Medicine | 
| Author | Arielle G Asman, Claire J Hoogendoorn, Diane McKee, Jeffrey S Gonzalez | 
| Keywords | Anxiety, depression, diabetes mellitus, Signs and symptoms, Type 2 | 
| Abstract | 
   Depression and anxiety have been linked to increased somatic symptoms among individuals with type 2 diabetes (T2D), but their independent effects and role in symptom attributions remain unclear. This study examined depression and anxiety in relation to total symptoms and symptom attributions in a diverse sample of 120 adults with T2D. Multiple linear regression tested associations after controlling for medical comorbidities and insulin use. Clinician-rated depression (β = .53, p < .001), self-reported depression (β = .59, p < .001) and self-reported anxiety (β = .62, p < .001) were positively associated with total somatic symptoms. Models adjusting for depression and anxiety revealed significant independent effects for each, regardless of measurement method. In attribution models, only self-reported depression (β = .27, p = .003) was significantly associated with greater attribution to diabetes, whereas clinician-rated depression (β = .19, p = .047), self-reported depression (β = .38, p < .001) and anxiety (β = .28, p = .004) were associated with increased attribution to medications. In models adjusting for depression and anxiety, self-reported depression was a significant independent predictor of diabetes (β = .29, p = .023) and medication (β = .38, p = .004) attribution; anxiety was a significant predictor of medication attribution (β = .25, p = .039). Findings suggest depression and anxiety are implicated in overall increases in somatic symptom complaints and an increased tendency to attribute these symptoms to diabetes and side-effects of diabetes medications among adults with T2D.  | 
        
| Year of Publication | 
   2020 
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| Journal | 
   Journal of behavioral medicine 
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| Volume | 
   43 
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| Issue | 
   1 
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| Number of Pages | 
   57-68 
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| Date Published | 
   02/2020 
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| ISSN Number | 
   1573-3521 
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| DOI | 
   10.1007/s10865-019-00056-x 
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| Alternate Journal | 
   J Behav Med 
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| PMID | 
   31111355 
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