Winnick Joel B, Berg Cynthia A, Wiebe Deborah J, Schaefer Barbara A, Lei Pui-Wa, Butner Jonathan E
Department of Educational Psychology, Counseling, and Special Education, Pennsylvania State University.
Department of Psychology, University of Utah.
Sch Psychol Q. 2017 Mar;32(1):105-117. doi: 10.1037/spq0000190. Epub 2017 Jan 12.
The relation between metabolic control (HbA1c) and achievement (grade point average [GPA]) was examined over a period of 2.5 years (every 6 months) employing a dynamical systems approach that allowed for the examination of whether HbA1c was associated with change in subsequent GPA and vice versa. Metabolic control tends to deteriorate (i.e., with higher HbA1c reflecting poorer metabolic control) during adolescence. It was hypothesized that these higher levels of HbA1c would limit subsequent increases in GPA. The sample included 252 adolescents (Mbaseline age = 12.49 years, SD = 1.53; 53.6% female) with Type 1 diabetes. Mothers' report and school records provided information on relevant demographics and GPA; medical records provided values of HbA1c. Two simultaneous coupled change equations (i.e., examining current values in 1 variable associated with changes in the other) controlling relevant risk indicators (i.e., age, sex, disease duration, insulin delivery method, IQ) revealed higher levels of HbA1c limited increases in GPA. Higher levels of GPA, however, were not associated with change in HbA1c except for 2 instances where moderation existed by disease duration and IQ. Higher GPA was associated with slower increases in HbA1c over time for youth with shorter disease duration and lower IQ. These results affirm the importance of maintaining good metabolic control to facilitate adequate school performance across the adolescent years. Further, the results suggest that factors related to school achievement may protect adolescents who are newly diagnosed or who have low cognitive ability from subsequent deterioration in metabolic control. (PsycINFO Database Record
采用动态系统方法,在2.5年的时间里(每6个月一次)研究了代谢控制(糖化血红蛋白[HbA1c])与学业成绩(平均绩点[GPA])之间的关系,该方法能够检验HbA1c是否与随后的GPA变化相关,反之亦然。在青春期,代谢控制往往会恶化(即HbA1c水平越高,代谢控制越差)。研究假设,较高水平的HbA1c会限制随后GPA的提高。样本包括252名1型糖尿病青少年(基线年龄M = 12.49岁,标准差SD = 1.53;53.6%为女性)。母亲的报告和学校记录提供了相关人口统计学信息和GPA;医疗记录提供了HbA1c值。两个同时耦合的变化方程(即检查一个变量的当前值与另一个变量的变化相关)控制相关风险指标(即年龄、性别、病程、胰岛素给药方式、智商),结果显示较高水平的HbA1c限制了GPA的提高。然而,除了病程和智商存在调节作用的2个实例外,较高水平的GPA与HbA1c的变化无关。对于病程较短和智商较低的青少年,较高的GPA与HbA1c随时间的缓慢增加相关。这些结果证实了在青少年时期保持良好的代谢控制以促进学业表现的重要性。此外,结果表明,与学业成绩相关的因素可能会保护新诊断或认知能力较低的青少年免受随后代谢控制的恶化。(PsycINFO数据库记录)