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非严重低血糖事件对工作生产力和糖尿病管理的影响。

The impact of non-severe hypoglycemic events on work productivity and diabetes management.

机构信息

The Brod Group, Mill Valley, CA 94941, USA.

出版信息

Value Health. 2011 Jul-Aug;14(5):665-71. doi: 10.1016/j.jval.2011.02.001.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

Hypoglycemia is a common complication of treatment with certain diabetes drugs. Non-severe hypoglycemic events (NSHEs) occur more frequently than severe events and account for the majority of total events. The objective of this multi-country study was to identify how NSHEs in a working population affect productivity, costs, and self-management behaviors.

METHODS

A 20-minute survey assessing the impact of NSHEs was administered via the Internet to individuals (≥ 18 years of age) with self-reported diabetes in the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, and France. The analysis sample consisted of all respondents who reported an NSHE in the past month. Topics included: reasons for, duration of, and impact of NSHE(s) on productivity and diabetes self-management.

RESULTS

A total of 1404 respondents were included in this analysis. Lost productivity was estimated to range from $15.26 to $93.47 (USD) per NSHE, representing 8.3 to 15.9 hours of lost work time per month. Among individuals reporting an NSHE at work (n = 972), 18.3% missed work for an average of 9.9 hours (SD 8.4). Among respondents experiencing an NSHE outside working hours (including nocturnal), 22.7% arrived late for work or missed a full day. Productivity loss was highest for NSHEs occurring during sleep, with an average of 14.7 (SD 11.6) working hours lost. In the week following the NSHE, respondents required an average of 5.6 extra blood glucose test strips. Among respondents using insulin, 25% decreased their insulin dose following the NSHE.

CONCLUSIONS

NSHEs are associated with substantial economic consequences for employers and patients. Greater attention to treatments that reduce NSHEs could have a major, positive impact on lost work productivity and overall diabetes management.

摘要

目的

低血糖是某些糖尿病药物治疗的常见并发症。非严重低血糖事件(NSHE)比严重事件更频繁发生,占总事件的大多数。这项多国研究的目的是确定工作人群中的 NSHE 如何影响生产力、成本和自我管理行为。

方法

通过互联网向美国、英国、德国和法国有自我报告糖尿病的个人(≥ 18 岁)进行了一项 20 分钟的调查,评估 NSHE 的影响。分析样本包括过去一个月报告有 NSHE 的所有受访者。主题包括:NSHE 的原因、持续时间以及对生产力和糖尿病自我管理的影响。

结果

共有 1404 名受访者纳入本分析。估计每个 NSHE 的生产力损失范围为 15.26 至 93.47 美元(USD),代表每月损失 8.3 至 15.9 小时的工作时间。在报告工作中发生 NSHE 的个体(n = 972)中,18.3%因平均 9.9 小时(SD 8.4)缺勤。在报告工作时间以外(包括夜间)发生 NSHE 的受访者中,22.7%迟到或旷工一天。在睡眠期间发生的 NSHE 导致生产力损失最高,平均损失 14.7(SD 11.6)个工作小时。在 NSHE 后的一周内,受访者平均需要额外的 5.6 个血糖测试条。在使用胰岛素的受访者中,25%在 NSHE 后减少了胰岛素剂量。

结论

NSHE 与雇主和患者的重大经济后果相关。更多关注可减少 NSHE 的治疗方法可能对工作生产力损失和整体糖尿病管理产生重大积极影响。

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