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白人、非裔美国人和西班牙裔美国远程医疗参与者的糖尿病自我护理依从性:IDEA Tel 项目的 5 年结果。

Adherence to diabetes self care for white, African-American and Hispanic American telemedicine participants: 5 year results from the IDEATel project.

机构信息

Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY, USA.

出版信息

Ethn Health. 2013;18(1):83-96. doi: 10.1080/13557858.2012.700915. Epub 2012 Jul 5.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

Adherence to diabetes self care is poor for Hispanic American and African-American patients. This study examined the change in adherence over time and in response to a telemedicine intervention for elderly diabetes patients in these groups compared to white diabetes patients. We also examined whether adherence mediated the effect of the intervention on glycemic control (A1c).

DESIGN

The Informatics for Diabetes Education and Telemedicine project randomized medically underserved Medicare patients (n=1665) to telemedicine case management (televideo educator visits, individualized goal-setting/problem solving) or usual care. Hispanic and African-American educators delivered the intervention in Spanish if needed.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES

Annual assessment included A1c and self-reported adherence (Summary of Diabetes Self-Care Activities scale). A simple model (only time and group terms) and a model with covariates (e.g., age) were examined for baseline and 5 years of follow-up. SAS PROC Mixed was used with non-linear terms to examine mediating effects of adherence on A1c, by performing tests of the mediating path coefficients.

RESULTS

Over time, self-reported adherence improved for the treatment group compared to usual care (p<0.001). There was no significant interaction with racial/ethnic group membership, i.e., all groups improved. However, minority subjects were consistently less adherent than whites. Also, greater comorbidity and diabetes symptoms predicted poorer adherence, greater duration of diabetes and more years of education predicted better adherence. Adherence was a significant mediator of A1c (p<0.001).

CONCLUSIONS

A unique, tailored telemedicine intervention was effective in achieving improved adherence to diabetes self care. However, African-American and Hispanic American participants were less adherent than white participants at all time points despite an individualized and accessible intervention. The finding that adherence did mediate glycemic control suggests that unique interventions for minority groups may be needed to overcome this disparity.

摘要

目的

西班牙裔和非裔美国的糖尿病患者自我护理的依从性较差。本研究比较了在这两个群体中的老年糖尿病患者接受远程医疗干预前后以及与白人糖尿病患者相比,随时间推移,其依从性的变化情况。我们还检查了依从性是否介导了干预对糖化血红蛋白(A1c)的影响。

设计

Informatics for Diabetes Education and Telemedicine 项目将医疗服务不足的 Medicare 患者(n=1665)随机分配到远程医疗病例管理(远程视频教育者访问、个性化目标设定/解决问题)或常规护理组。如果需要,西班牙裔和非裔美国教育者会以西班牙语提供干预措施。

主要观察指标

每年的评估包括 A1c 和自我报告的依从性(糖尿病自我护理活动量表摘要)。使用简单模型(仅包括时间和组项)和具有协变量(如年龄)的模型对基线和 5 年随访进行了检查。使用 SAS PROC Mixed 并使用非线性项来检查依从性对 A1c 的中介效应,通过对中介路径系数进行检验来实现。

结果

随着时间的推移,与常规护理相比,治疗组的自我报告依从性有所提高(p<0.001)。与种族/族裔群体成员身份没有显著的相互作用,即所有群体都有所改善。然而,少数群体的依从性始终低于白人。此外,合并症和糖尿病症状较多、糖尿病持续时间较长、受教育年限较长预测着更好的依从性。依从性是 A1c 的一个显著中介(p<0.001)。

结论

一种独特的、量身定制的远程医疗干预措施能够有效提高糖尿病自我护理的依从性。然而,尽管采取了个体化和可及的干预措施,在所有时间点,非裔美国人和西班牙裔美国参与者的依从性都低于白人参与者。依从性确实介导了血糖控制,这表明可能需要针对少数民族群体的独特干预措施来克服这一差距。

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