School of Social Work, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Austin, Texas.
Steve Hicks of Social Work, University of Texas, Austin.
Sci Diabetes Self Manag Care. 2021 Oct;47(5):346-354. doi: 10.1177/26350106211033811. Epub 2021 Aug 12.
The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between visual impairment and diabetes management self-efficacy.
The present study utilized pooled cross-sectional data (2008-2018) from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Household Component and Diabetes Care Survey. Binary and generalized ordinal logit regression models were used to compare diabetes management self-efficacy between patients with and without visual impairments.
Compared to their non-visually impaired counterparts, visually impaired persons had a lower odds of reporting high diabetes management self-efficacy. Similarly, visually impaired adults with diabetes have a significantly lower odds of being very confident in their ability to manage their conditions compared with adults who reported being not confident, somewhat confident, or confident. Several control factors, including self-behaviors and receipt of diabetes self-management education (DSME), were also associated with diabetes management self-efficacy.
Visually impaired persons experience significant disparities in diabetes management self-efficacy. Given the relationship between self-efficacy and diabetes-related outcomes, it is crucial that DSME be tailored to effectively meet the individual needs of this population. Future research should explore the relationship between DSME and self-care behaviors, self-efficacy, and diabetes-related outcomes in visually impaired persons.
本研究旨在探讨视力障碍与糖尿病管理自我效能之间的关系。
本研究利用了 2008 年至 2018 年期间来自医疗支出调查家庭部分和糖尿病护理调查的汇总横断面数据。采用二项和广义有序逻辑回归模型比较了有视力障碍和无视力障碍患者之间的糖尿病管理自我效能。
与非视力障碍患者相比,视力障碍患者报告具有较高的糖尿病管理自我效能的可能性较低。同样,与报告缺乏信心、有些信心或有信心的成年人相比,患有糖尿病的视力障碍成年人对自己管理病情的能力非常有信心的可能性显著降低。一些控制因素,包括自我行为和接受糖尿病自我管理教育(DSME),也与糖尿病管理自我效能相关。
视力障碍患者在糖尿病管理自我效能方面存在显著差异。鉴于自我效能与糖尿病相关结果之间的关系,必须根据个人需求调整 DSME,以有效满足这一人群的需求。未来的研究应探讨 DSME 与自我保健行为、自我效能和视力障碍者的糖尿病相关结果之间的关系。