Department of Clinical Research, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark.
Steno Diabetes Center Odense, Odense University Hospital, Odense, Denmark.
Pediatr Diabetes. 2020 Sep;21(6):995-1030. doi: 10.1111/pedi.13022. Epub 2020 Jun 14.
Emerging adults with type 1 diabetes often have poor diabetes self-care and pose a considerable therapeutic challenge. They simultaneously handle a life phase characterized by instability, identity exploration, and transitions and manage a chronic illness that demands structure, self-discipline, and repeated health care contacts. Relation to parents is often ambivalent but typically remains the most stable social support, so parental support could potentially be helpful for diabetes self-care and wellbeing.
This scoping review aimed to identify, summarize and analyze empirical studies (for instance interview studies, questionnaire studies and intervention studies) exploring parental support for emerging adults with type 1 diabetes. Studies were identified in PsycInfo, PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar. Data were extracted by one author and checked by another. Study results were synthesized by a convergent mixed methods approach and qualitative thematic analysis.
We included 26 studies (2829 participants), 16 interview studies, 10 questionnaire studies, and no intervention studies. Five overarching themes were identified: self-care and glycemic control, diabetes-related emotional wellbeing, support characteristics, ambivalence and harms, and core support providers. Parents tended to contribute positively to diabetes self-care, glycemic control, and psychological wellbeing. However, emerging adults did not want to be too dependent on their parents and family, and family could also act unsupportively; when absent, disinterested in diabetes or controlling.
This review underlines that parental support still plays a role for diabetes self-care and wellbeing in emerging adults with type 1 diabetes. Age-appropriate parental support therefore seems a promising path to investigate further.
患有 1 型糖尿病的成年初期患者通常自我护理较差,这给治疗带来了很大的挑战。他们同时处于一个不稳定、身份探索和过渡的生活阶段,需要管理一种需要结构、自律和反复医疗保健接触的慢性疾病。与父母的关系往往是矛盾的,但通常仍然是最稳定的社会支持,因此父母的支持可能对糖尿病自我护理和幸福感有帮助。
本范围综述旨在确定、总结和分析探索父母对患有 1 型糖尿病的成年初期患者的支持的实证研究(例如访谈研究、问卷调查研究和干预研究)。研究在 PsycInfo、PubMed、Scopus 和 Google Scholar 中进行了识别。数据由一位作者提取,由另一位作者检查。研究结果通过收敛混合方法和定性主题分析进行综合。
我们纳入了 26 项研究(2829 名参与者),其中 16 项为访谈研究,10 项为问卷调查研究,没有干预研究。确定了五个总体主题:自我护理和血糖控制、与糖尿病相关的情绪健康、支持特征、矛盾和危害以及核心支持提供者。父母往往对糖尿病自我护理、血糖控制和心理健康有积极的贡献。然而,成年初期患者不想过于依赖他们的父母和家庭,家庭也可能表现出不支持的态度;当父母不在场、对糖尿病不感兴趣或控制过度时。
本综述强调,父母的支持仍然对患有 1 型糖尿病的成年初期患者的自我护理和幸福感起着作用。因此,适当的父母支持似乎是一个值得进一步研究的有前途的途径。