4.2 Article

Associations between patient characteristics, social relations, diabetes management, quality of life, glycaemic control and emotional burden in type 1 diabetes

Journal

PRIMARY CARE DIABETES
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages 41-50

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.pcd.2015.06.007

Keywords

Type-1 diabetes; Adults; Diabetes distress; Emotional burden; Social support; Generic quality of life; Diabetes empowerment; Self-management; HbA1c

Funding

  1. Novo Foundation
  2. Novo Nordisk A/S

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Aim: The objective was to investigate associations between emotional burden and a number of individual variables: patient characteristics, social relations, diabetes management in everyday life, generic quality of life and glycaemic control, including determining to what extend these variables explain the differences in emotional burden in a large Danish population of people with type 1 diabetes. Methods: We analysed a cross-sectional survey of 2419 Danish adults with type-1 diabetes mellitus and data from an electronic patient record. Data were analysed using hierarchical regression of factors of interest with emotional burden of diabetes as the dependent variable. Results: High emotional burden of diabetes was associated with being female, younger age, other chronic illness, low diabetes-specific support, low generic quality of life, low diabetes empowerment and high Hba1c. Low diabetes empowerment, low generic quality of life and low diabetes-specific support were associated with the largest difference in emotional burden level. Conclusions: A variety of psychosocial and behavioural factors such as low social support, low generic quality of life and difficulties in managing diabetes are associated with high emotional burden in type-1 diabetes. These findings may call for an expansion of the effort to decrease the emotional burden of diabetes for those who are heavily burdened. Future research should explore the causality of the explored associations as well as potential subgroup differences in order to guide the development of appropriate interventions. (C) 2015 Primary Care Diabetes Europe. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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