ESIC Medical College & PGIMSR, KK Nagar, Chennai, 600078, India.
Department of Community Medicine, ESIC Medical College & PGIMSR, KK Nagar, Chennai, 600078, India.
BMC Public Health. 2018 Jul 4;18(1):826. doi: 10.1186/s12889-018-5766-1.
Self-management is an essential component of prevention and treatment of type 2 diabetes. Social and family support has been shown to influence self-management behaviors as well as glycemic control and complications. This study was conducted to assess whether diabetes family support improves diabetes self-management and glycemic control in a typical urban population in India.
A cross-sectional study using a questionnaire that had items from the Summary of Diabetes Self Care Activities Scale (SDSCA), the Diabetes Family Behavior Checklist (DFBC) and some sociodemographic and diabetes related clinical data was conducted. The participants were consecutively sampled from the diabetes outpatient department in a tertiary care hospital in Chennai, south India.
A total of 200 consecutive patients from the diabetes outpatient department were interviewed. Diabetes self-management practices were good with respect to avoiding fatty foods and carbohydrates and undergoing regular blood testing for glucose. But the self-management with respect to exercise and foot related care was rare. It was observed that a vast majority of the patients did not report receiving any support from their families. However, in the small proportion who did receive good family support, there is an association between diabetes self-management and diabetes family support (β = 0.527; p = 0.015). Further, the path model showed that there is a positive statistically significant association between family support score and the diabetes self-management score (β = 0.254, p < 0.001). However, the negative association between the diabetes self-management score and the mean plasma glucose did not reach statistical significance (β = - 46.378, p = 0.082).
In the urban south Indian setting, family support was significantly associated with better self-management activities, but better self-management did not reflect as better glycaemic control.
自我管理是 2 型糖尿病预防和治疗的重要组成部分。社会和家庭支持已被证明会影响自我管理行为以及血糖控制和并发症。本研究旨在评估糖尿病家庭支持是否能改善印度典型城市人群的糖尿病自我管理和血糖控制。
采用横断面研究,使用问卷评估,问卷内容包括糖尿病自我护理活动量表(SDSCA)、糖尿病家庭行为检查表(DFBC)以及一些社会人口统计学和糖尿病相关的临床数据。参与者从印度南部钦奈的一家三级护理医院的糖尿病门诊连续抽样。
共对 200 名糖尿病门诊患者进行了访谈。在避免食用高脂肪食物和碳水化合物以及定期进行血糖检测方面,糖尿病自我管理实践良好。但在运动和足部护理方面的自我管理则很少见。结果发现,绝大多数患者没有报告从家人那里得到任何支持。然而,在少数确实得到良好家庭支持的患者中,糖尿病自我管理与糖尿病家庭支持之间存在关联(β=0.527;p=0.015)。此外,路径模型显示,家庭支持评分与糖尿病自我管理评分之间存在正的统计学显著关联(β=0.254,p<0.001)。然而,糖尿病自我管理评分与平均血浆葡萄糖之间的负相关没有达到统计学意义(β=-46.378,p=0.082)。
在印度南部城市环境中,家庭支持与更好的自我管理活动显著相关,但更好的自我管理并没有反映出更好的血糖控制。