d'Emden Helen, McDermott Brett, D'Silva Neisha, Dover Tom, Ewais Tatjana, Gibbons Kristen, O'Moore-Sullivan Trisha
Queensland Diabetes and Endocrine Centre, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Mater Research, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Intern Med J. 2017 Apr;47(4):415-423. doi: 10.1111/imj.13375.
Routine psychosocial screening and management of people with diabetes is recommended.
To profile demographic, medical and psychosocial characteristics of young people with diabetes, and to develop a screening tool and care pathway for routine use.
Indices of diabetes control and recorded diabetes complications were complimented by psychosocial screening tools assessing psychological, diabetes specific and perceived stress (Kessler 10, Problem Area in Diabetes, Perceived Stress Scale), well-being (World Health Organization Well Being Index-5), disordered eating (Eating Disorder Risk Inventory-3 Risk Composite), compensatory behaviour questionnaire, social support (Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support), resilience (Connor Davidson Resilience Scale - 2 item) and financial concerns. Service provision and demographic data were also collected. Diabetes and mental health clinicians then identified a subset of measures to use for routine screening along with care pathways.
Psychosocial screening was well accepted. Participants (151) had suboptimal glycaemic control (glycated haemoglobin 8.0 interquartile range 1.8%/64 interquartile range 22 mmol/mol). Severe diabetes-related distress (Problem Area in Diabetes ≥40) was found in 19.4% and 26.0% reported difficulties managing healthcare costs. A mental health disorder was likely in 9.7%, whilst 23.4% had high Kessler 10 scores. Low World Health Organization Well Being Index-5 scores (≤13) were seen in 29.0%. Risk for an eating disorder (Eating Disorder Risk Inventory-3 Risk Composite) was 12.7%, whereas approximately 36.0% had disturbed eating behaviours.
Psychosocial screening of young adults with diabetes identified complex needs. A brief psychosocial screening tool and associated care pathways were developed for routine use in a young adult tertiary referral diabetes clinic. The tool assesses constructs, such as diabetes distress, depression, anxiety, well-being, hypoglycaemia-unawareness, fear of hypoglycaemia, social support, weight, shape and eating concerns and financial concerns. This will provide a longitudinal data source for further research to inform clinical practice.
建议对糖尿病患者进行常规心理社会筛查与管理。
剖析糖尿病青少年的人口统计学、医学及心理社会特征,并开发一种用于常规使用的筛查工具及护理路径。
通过心理社会筛查工具评估心理、糖尿病特异性及感知压力(凯斯勒10项量表、糖尿病问题领域、感知压力量表)、幸福感(世界卫生组织幸福指数-5)、饮食失调(饮食失调风险量表-3风险综合评分)、代偿行为问卷、社会支持(多维感知社会支持量表)、心理韧性(康纳-戴维森心理韧性量表-2项)及经济担忧,以此补充糖尿病控制指标及已记录的糖尿病并发症情况。还收集了服务提供及人口统计学数据。随后,糖尿病及心理健康临床医生确定了一部分用于常规筛查的测量指标以及护理路径。
心理社会筛查得到了很好的接受。151名参与者的血糖控制欠佳(糖化血红蛋白8.0,四分位间距1.8%/64,四分位间距22 mmol/mol)。19.4%的人存在严重的糖尿病相关困扰(糖尿病问题领域≥40),26.0%的人报告在管理医疗费用方面存在困难。9.7%的人可能患有精神障碍,而23.4%的人凯斯勒10项量表得分较高。29.0%的人世界卫生组织幸福指数-5得分较低(≤13)。饮食失调风险(饮食失调风险量表-3风险综合评分)为12.7%,而约36.0%的人存在饮食行为紊乱。
对糖尿病青年成年人进行心理社会筛查发现了复杂的需求。开发了一种简短的心理社会筛查工具及相关护理路径,用于青年成年人三级转诊糖尿病诊所的常规使用。该工具评估了诸如糖尿病困扰、抑郁、焦虑、幸福感、低血糖无知觉、低血糖恐惧、社会支持、体重、体型及饮食担忧以及经济担忧等构念。这将为进一步研究提供纵向数据源,以指导临床实践。