Department of Pediatrics, Medical College of Wisconsin/Children's Hospital of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin.
Pediatr Diabetes. 2019 Nov;20(7):1016-1024. doi: 10.1111/pedi.12899. Epub 2019 Aug 8.
The American Diabetes Association recommends a family-centered approach that addresses each family's specific type 1 diabetes self-management barriers.
To assess an intervention that tailored delivery of self-management resources to families' specific self-management barriers.
At two sites, 214 children 8-16 years old with type 1 diabetes and their parent(s) were randomized to receive tailored self-management resources (intervention, n = 106) or usual care (n = 108).
Our intervention (1) identified families' self-management barriers with a validated survey, (2) tailored self-management resources to identified barriers, and (3) delivered the resources as four group sessions coordinated with diabetes visits. Mixed effects models with repeated measures were fit to A1c as well as parent and child QOL during the intervention and 1 year thereafter.
Participants were 44% youth (8-12 years) and 56% teens (13-16 years). No intervention effect on A1c or QOL was shown, combining data from sites and age groups. Analyzing results by site and age group, post-intervention A1c for teens at one site declined by 0.06 more per month for intervention teens compared to usual care (P < 0.05). In this group, post-intervention A1c declined significantly when baseline A1c was >8.5 (-0.08, P < 0.05), with an even larger decline when baseline A1c was >10 (-0.19, P < 0.05). In addition, for these teens, the significant improvements in A1c resulted from addressing barriers related to motivation to self-manage. Also at this site, mean QOL increased by 0.61 points per month more during the intervention for parents of intervention youth than for usual care youth (P < 0.05).
Tailored self-management resources may improve outcomes among specific populations, suggesting the need to consider families' self-management barriers and patient characteristics before implementing self-management resources.
美国糖尿病协会推荐采用以家庭为中心的方法,针对每个家庭特定的 1 型糖尿病自我管理障碍进行干预。
评估一种针对家庭特定自我管理障碍提供个性化自我管理资源的干预措施。
在两个地点,214 名 8-16 岁患有 1 型糖尿病的儿童及其父母被随机分为接受个性化自我管理资源干预组(n=106)或常规护理组(n=108)。
我们的干预措施(1)通过一项经过验证的调查确定家庭的自我管理障碍,(2)针对确定的障碍定制自我管理资源,(3)将资源作为四个小组会议与糖尿病就诊相协调进行交付。采用混合效应模型进行重复测量,以评估干预期间及之后 1 年的糖化血红蛋白(A1c)以及父母和儿童的生活质量(QOL)。
参与者中 44%为儿童(8-12 岁),56%为青少年(13-16 岁)。综合两个地点和两个年龄组的数据,未显示干预对 A1c 或 QOL 有影响。按地点和年龄组进行分析,一个地点的青少年在干预后,每个月 A1c 下降 0.06,干预组青少年比常规护理组青少年多(P<0.05)。在该组中,当基线 A1c>8.5 时,干预后 A1c 显著下降(-0.08,P<0.05),当基线 A1c>10 时,A1c 下降更明显(-0.19,P<0.05)。此外,对于这些青少年来说,A1c 的显著改善是通过解决与自我管理动机相关的障碍实现的。同样在该地点,干预组青少年的父母在干预期间每月的 QOL 平均增加 0.61 分,比常规护理组青少年多(P<0.05)。
个性化自我管理资源可能会改善特定人群的结局,这表明在实施自我管理资源之前,需要考虑家庭的自我管理障碍和患者特征。