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Characterization of youth goal setting in the self-management of type 1 diabetes and associations with HbA1c: The Flexible Lifestyle Empowering Change trial.

Citation
Sarteau, A. C., et al. “Characterization Of Youth Goal Setting In The Self-Management Of Type 1 Diabetes And Associations With Hba1C: The Flexible Lifestyle Empowering Change Trial.”. Pediatric Diabetes.
Center Stanford University
Author Angelica Cristello Sarteau, Jamie Crandell, Michael Seid, Jessica C Kichler, David M Maahs, Jessica Wang, Elizabeth Mayer-Davis
Keywords blood glucose, Glycated Hemoglobin A, goals, self-management, type 1 diabetes mellitus
Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Youth with type 1 diabetes (T1D) commonly do not meet HbA1c targets. Youth-directed goal setting as a strategy to improve HbA1c has not been well characterized and associations between specific goal focus areas and glycemic control remain unexplored.

OBJECTIVE: To inform future trials, this analysis characterized intended focus areas of youth self-directed goals and examined associations with change in HbA1c over a 18 months.

METHODS: We inductively coded counseling session data from youth in the Flexible Lifestyle Empowering Change Intervention (n = 122, 13-16 years, T1D duration >1 year, HbA1c 8-13%) to categorize intended goal focus areas and examine associations between frequency of goal focus areas selected by youth and change in HbA1c between first and last study visit.

RESULTS: We identified 13 focus areas that categorized youth goal intentions. Each session where youth goal setting concurrently incorporated blood glucose monitoring (BGM), continuous glucose monitoring (CGM), and insulin dosing was associated with a 0.4% (95% CI: -0.77, -0.01; P = .03) lower HbA1c at the end of intervention participation. No association was observed between HbA1c and frequency of sessions where goal intentions focused on BG only (without addressing insulin or CGM) (β: 0.07; 95% CI: -0.07, 0.21; P = .33) nor insulin dosing only (without addressing BGM or CGM) (β: 0.00; 95% CI: -0.11, 0.10; P = .95).

CONCLUSIONS: Findings exemplify how guiding youth goal development and combining multiple behaviors proximally related to glycemic control into goal setting may benefit HbA1c among youth with T1D. More research characterizing optimal goal setting practices in youth with T1D is needed.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Pediatric diabetes
Date Published
08/2020
ISSN Number
1399-5448
DOI
10.1111/pedi.13099
Alternate Journal
Pediatr Diabetes
PMID
32741045
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