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Assessing readiness for independent self-care in adolescents with type 1 diabetes: Introducing the RISQ.

Citation
Goethals, E. R., et al. “Assessing Readiness For Independent Self-Care In Adolescents With Type 1 Diabetes: Introducing The Risq.”. Diabetes Research And Clinical Practice, p. 108110.
Center Joslin Diabetes Center
Author Eveline R Goethals, Persis Commissariat V, Lisa K Volkening, Jessica T Markowitz, Lori M Laffel
Keywords Adolescents, Readiness, Self-care, Transition, type 1 diabetes
Abstract

AIM: To design and evaluate psychometrics of adolescent self-report and parent proxy-report questionnaires assessing readiness for independent self-care in adolescents with type 1 diabetes (RISQ-T and RISQ-P).

METHODS: 178 adolescents with type 1 diabetes (ages 13-17 years) and their parents completed the 20-item RISQ-T and 15-item RISQ-P, along with diabetes-specific measures of parent involvement, self-efficacy, burden, and treatment adherence. Evaluation of psychometric properties included calculation of internal consistency, adolescent and parent agreement, test-retest reliability, concurrent and predictive validity.

RESULTS: The RISQ-T (α = 0.78) and RISQ-P (α = 0.77) demonstrated sound internal consistency. Higher RISQ-T and RISQ-P scores (indicating more adolescent readiness for independent self-care) showed significant associations with less parent involvement in diabetes care (adolescent r = -0.34; parent r = -0.47; p < .0001), greater adolescent diabetes self-efficacy (adolescent r = 0.32; parent r = 0.54; p < .0001), less parent-endorsed diabetes-related burden (parent r = -0.30; p < .0001), and greater treatment adherence (adolescent r = 0.26, p = .0004; parent r = 0.31, p < .0001). Adolescent and parent scores were significantly correlated (r = 0.35; p < .0001); test-retest reliability was reasonable (ICC RISQ-T r = 0.66; RISQ-P r = 0.71). Higher baseline RISQ-P scores significantly predicted reduced family involvement after six months (β = -0.14, p = .02).

CONCLUSIONS: RISQ-T and RISQ-P demonstrate sound psychometric properties. Surveys may help inform diabetes teams of the level of support needed to facilitate shift to independent self-management.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Diabetes research and clinical practice
Volume
162
Number of Pages
108110
Date Published
04/2020
ISSN Number
1872-8227
DOI
10.1016/j.diabres.2020.108110
Alternate Journal
Diabetes Res. Clin. Pract.
PMID
32194216
PMCID
PMC7238284
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