4.5 Article

Self-reported diabetes and quality of life: findings from a general population survey with the Short Form-12 (SF-12) Health Survey

Journal

ARCHIVES OF MEDICAL SCIENCE
Volume 18, Issue 5, Pages 1157-1168

Publisher

TERMEDIA PUBLISHING HOUSE LTD
DOI: 10.5114/aoms/135797

Keywords

diabetes mellitus; quality of life; questionnaire; health surveys

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study compared the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) between subjects with and without self-reported diabetes in a representative sample of the Polish general adult population. The results showed significant differences in various dimensions, particularly in physical functioning, general health, role physical, and bodily pain, between respondents with and without diabetes. Female sex, advanced age, low education levels, and insulin treatment were associated with impaired physical health in respondents with diabetes.
Introduction: The aim of the study was to compare health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in subjects with and without self-reported diabetes in a representative sample of the Polish general adult population. Material and methods: Members of the general Polish population, selected with multi-stage stratified sampling, filled in the Short Form-12 (SF-12) questionnaire and answered a question about the diagnosis of diabetes. We estimated four types of outcomes: eight domain scores, physical component (PCS- 12) and mental component (MCS-12) summaries, and a measure of overall health status weighted according to societal health preferences SF-6D. We used multiple linear regression to examine the associations of sociodemographic characteristics with SF-12 summary indices. Results: Among 2938 respondents with complete SF-12 data, the prevalence of self-reported diabetes was 8.5% (95% CI: 7.5- 9.6). Respondents with diabetes differed significantly from non-diabetic subjects in all SF-12 dimensions, with the most significant differences in physical functioning, general health, role physical and bodily pain (differences of means 31.9, 24.9, 24.1 and 22.3 points, respectively). Analysis across age groups showed that diabetes was associated with a mean decrease in PCS-12 and MCS-12 by 4.6 and 1.4 points, respectively. Female sex, advanced age, low education levels and treatment with insulin were independently associated with the impaired physical health of respondents with diabetes. Conclusions: We provided a consistent description of HRQoL, measured using the SF- 12 questionnaire, in subjects with self-reported diabetes and respondents without diabetes in a nationally representative sample of Polish adults. Identifying factors independently associated with worse HRQoL in respondents with diabetes may help healthcare providers target intervention programmes more effectively.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available