Steno Diabetes Center Copenhagen, Gentofte, Denmark.
Danish Centre for Health Economics, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark.
Diabet Med. 2019 Nov;36(11):1336-1348. doi: 10.1111/dme.14102. Epub 2019 Aug 21.
Time preferences, i.e. individuals' degree of patience/impatience in intertemporal choice, have been found to be associated with suboptimal health behaviours and health outcomes such as smoking, physical inactivity, unhealthy food intake and obesity. In this systematic review, we aimed to synthesise reported associations between time preferences, diabetes self-management behaviours, including use of diabetes technology, and outcomes.
We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, EconLit and all databases in the Web of Science Core Collection. Peer-reviewed studies of people with diabetes that included at least one diabetes-related behaviour or outcome and a measure of time preferences were included. Non-English language studies were excluded.
A total of 961 records were identified, of which 12 articles were included. Three studies analysed both time-consistent and time-inconsistent preferences, three studies solely analysed time-inconsistent preferences and six studies did not explicitly define a time preference model. Measured outcomes across studies included self-care activities, such as medication-taking, exercising and eating a healthy diet, and biomedical outcomes, such as HbA and diabetes-related complications. There were 10 cross-sectional studies and two panel-data studies. No studies explicitly analysed the relationship between time preferences and diabetes technology use.
Associations between measures of time preferences, diabetes self-management behaviours and clinical outcomes exist. Higher discount rates determined by both time-consistent and time-inconsistent models predict less diabetes-related self-care and worse outcomes. These findings may add to explanations of the observed variation in diabetes-related health and provide new insights for tailoring interventions and policies aimed at improving diabetes self-management.
时间偏好,即个体在跨期选择中耐心/急躁的程度,已被发现与次优的健康行为和健康结果相关,如吸烟、身体活动不足、不健康的饮食摄入和肥胖。在本系统综述中,我们旨在综合报告的时间偏好与糖尿病自我管理行为(包括使用糖尿病技术)之间的关联,以及与结局之间的关联。
我们检索了 MEDLINE、EMBASE、PsycINFO、CINAHL、EconLit 和 Web of Science Core Collection 中的所有数据库。纳入了包含至少一种与糖尿病相关的行为或结局以及时间偏好测量的糖尿病患者的同行评议研究。排除非英语语言的研究。
共确定了 961 条记录,其中有 12 篇文章被纳入。三项研究分析了时间一致和时间不一致的偏好,三项研究仅分析了时间不一致的偏好,六项研究没有明确定义时间偏好模型。研究中测量的结果包括自我护理活动,如服药、锻炼和健康饮食,以及生物医学结果,如 HbA 和糖尿病相关并发症。有 10 项横断面研究和 2 项面板数据研究。没有研究明确分析时间偏好与糖尿病技术使用之间的关系。
时间偏好的衡量指标、糖尿病自我管理行为和临床结局之间存在关联。时间一致和时间不一致模型确定的更高贴现率预测了较少的糖尿病相关自我护理和更差的结局。这些发现可能有助于解释观察到的糖尿病相关健康状况的变化,并为定制旨在改善糖尿病自我管理的干预措施和政策提供新的见解。