Hannover Medical School, Medical Psychology, Hannover, Germany.
Sana Hospital Group Berlin-Brandenburg, Social-Pediatric Centre Lichtenberg, Berlin, Germany.
J Diabetes Res. 2022 Dec 13;2022:9604115. doi: 10.1155/2022/9604115. eCollection 2022.
To investigate (1) daily, emotional, and physical caregiving burdens in parents of children with type 1 diabetes, (2) the sociodemographic and clinical predictors of three burdens, and (3) support measures that parents wish to receive.
The study was a multicenter cross-sectional survey conducted in nine German pediatric diabetes centers. A questionnaire assessing three types of burdens and wishes for support was distributed to parents with a child with type 1 diabetes visiting one of the pediatric centers for a routine check-up.
Data from 1,107 parents (83% mothers) were analyzed. Parents reported significantly higher emotional burdens compared to daily and physical burdens ( < 0.0001). Mothers felt more burdened than fathers did. Parents of younger children reported higher daily and physical burdens compared to the parents of older children, and similarly, parents of technology users reported higher daily and physical burdens compared to the parents of nontechnology users. However, emotional burdens did not differ in both comparisons. Other demographic factors (i.e., parent's age, migration status, and single-parent family status) predicted high levels of daily or physical burdens, but only HbA1c level and the parent's gender (mother) predicted a high emotional burden. Independent of the level of burden, 78% of parents wanted additional diabetes training.
Despite parents reporting high emotional burdens in connection with diabetes care, HbA1c and the gender of the reporting parent were the only risk factors. As the child gets older, parents' daily and physical distress decrease but not the emotional burden. Diabetes training including regularly offered booster sessions as well as low-threshold interventions for mental health issues and practical self-care skills is recommended to provide continuous support for parents.
(1)调查 1 型糖尿病患儿父母的日常、情绪和身体照护负担,(2)三种负担的社会人口学和临床预测因素,以及 3)父母希望得到的支持措施。
本研究为在德国 9 个儿科糖尿病中心进行的多中心横断面调查。向在儿科中心进行常规检查的 1 型糖尿病患儿的父母分发了一份评估三种负担和支持愿望的问卷。
对 1107 名家长(83%为母亲)的数据进行了分析。与日常和身体负担相比,父母报告的情绪负担明显更高(<0.0001)。母亲比父亲感到更大的负担。与年长儿童的父母相比,年幼儿童的父母报告的日常和身体负担更高,同样,与非技术使用者的父母相比,技术使用者的父母报告的日常和身体负担更高。然而,这两种比较在情绪负担方面没有差异。其他人口统计学因素(即父母的年龄、移民身份和单亲家庭状况)预测了日常或身体负担的高水平,但只有 HbA1c 水平和父母的性别(母亲)预测了情绪负担的高水平。独立于负担水平,78%的父母希望获得额外的糖尿病培训。
尽管父母在与糖尿病护理相关的报告中情绪负担很高,但 HbA1c 和报告父母的性别是唯一的危险因素。随着孩子年龄的增长,父母的日常和身体痛苦会减轻,但情绪负担不会减轻。建议提供包括定期提供助推课程在内的糖尿病培训,以及针对心理健康问题和实用自我护理技能的低门槛干预措施,为父母提供持续支持。