Shah Baiju R, Manuel Douglas G
Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Toronto, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2008 Jul 7;8:142. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-8-142.
The purposes of this cohort study were to establish how frequently people with physician-diagnosed diabetes self-reported the disease, to determine factors associated with self-reporting of diabetes, and to evaluate subsequent differences in self-management behaviour, health care utilisation and clinical outcomes between people who do and do not report their disease.
We used a registry of physician-diagnosed diabetes as a reference standard. We studied respondents to a 2000/01 population-based health survey who were in the registry (n = 1,812), and we determined the proportion who reported having diabetes during the survey. Baseline factors associated with self-report and subsequent behavioural, utilisation and clinical differences between those who did and did not self-report were defined from the survey responses and from linkage with administrative data sources.
Only 75% of people with physician-diagnosed diabetes reported having the disease. People who did self-report were more likely to be male, to live in rural areas, to have longer disease duration and to have received specialist physician care. People who did not report having diabetes in the survey were markedly less likely to perform capillary blood glucose monitoring in the subsequent two years (OR 0.05, 95% CI 0.02 to 0.08). They were also less likely to receive specialist physician care (OR 0.55, 95% CI 0.37 to 0.86), and were less likely to require hospital care for hypo- or hyperglycaemia (OR 0.09, 95% CI 0.01 to 0.28).
Many people with physician-diagnosed diabetes do not report having the disease, but most demographic and clinical features do not distinguish these individuals. These individuals are much less likely to perform capillary glucose monitoring, suggesting that their diabetes self-management is inadequate. Clinicians may be able to use the absence of glucose monitoring as a screening tool to identify people needing a detailed evaluation of their disease knowledge.
这项队列研究的目的是确定经医生诊断患有糖尿病的人群自我报告该疾病的频率,确定与糖尿病自我报告相关的因素,并评估报告疾病与未报告疾病的人群在自我管理行为、医疗保健利用和临床结局方面的后续差异。
我们将医生诊断的糖尿病登记册用作参考标准。我们研究了登记册中的2000/01年基于人群的健康调查的受访者(n = 1812),并确定了在调查期间报告患有糖尿病的比例。根据调查回复以及与行政数据源的关联,确定了与自我报告相关的基线因素以及自我报告者与未自我报告者之间随后的行为、利用和临床差异。
在经医生诊断患有糖尿病的人群中,只有75%报告患有该疾病。自我报告者更有可能是男性,居住在农村地区,病程更长,并且接受过专科医生护理。在调查中未报告患有糖尿病的人在随后两年内进行毛细血管血糖监测的可能性明显较低(比值比0.05,95%置信区间0.02至0.08)。他们接受专科医生护理的可能性也较低(比值比0.55,95%置信区间0.37至0.86),因低血糖或高血糖需要住院治疗的可能性也较低(比值比0.09,95%置信区间0.01至0.28)。
许多经医生诊断患有糖尿病的人未报告患有该疾病,但大多数人口统计学和临床特征无法区分这些个体。这些个体进行毛细血管血糖监测的可能性要低得多,这表明他们的糖尿病自我管理不足。临床医生可以将未进行血糖监测作为一种筛查工具,以识别需要详细评估其疾病知识的人群。