DeVries Caitlan, Rodríguez-Putnam Alejandro, Ewen Alana, Flores Bella, Choudhary Pragya, Spring Emma, Miller Alyson, Zhong Chuwen, Mannor Kara M, Messina Rossella, Mezuk Briana
Center for Social Epidemiology and Population Health, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Department of Behavioral and Community Health, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, USA.
BMJ Open. 2025 Apr 10;15(4):e088082. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-088082.
Psychosocial factors impact diabetes outcomes, yet healthcare systems remain inadequately equipped to address these needs. Research centring on the experiences of people with diabetes (PWD) can inform programme implementation, policies and partnerships to address psychosocial care needs. The goals of the diabetes, distress and disparities (3D) study are to quantify the psychosocial care needs of PWD in a large academic medical centre, generate insights regarding how psychosocial factors shape diabetes outcomes and identify modifiable determinants of psychosocial care.
The 3D study is recruiting adults with type 1 (T1D), type 2 (T2D), latent autoimmune diabetes in adults (LADA) and gestational diabetes (GD) from the Caswell Diabetes Registry at Michigan Medicine. The 3D study uses an explanatory sequential mixed-methods design with two phases. Phase I (P1: target n=500, began July 2023) consists of an online survey to quantify prevalence and examine correlates of a wide range of psychosocial factors (eg, diabetes-related distress, depression, stigma). This survey was refined through consultation with PWD. Phase II (P2) involves semi-structured telephone interviews with n=40 P1 respondents, recruited using maximum variation sampling informed by demographic characteristics and responses to psychosocial survey measures. P2 will explore a subset of factors (eg, patient-provider communication, social support, barriers/promoters to care). To date, n=573 (5% response rate) have completed P1. In March 2024, we identified a target sample of P1 respondents (n=65) for recruitment into P2. All data collection was completed by September 2024. Analysis will involve quantitative linear and logistic regression to understand correlates of psychosocial outcomes from P1, and qualitative content analysis to clarify potential points of intervention from P2.
This study is approved by the University of Michigan Institutional Review Board (HUM00223735). Protocol materials are available at https://osf.io/yfz6b/. Findings from this study will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications, presentations at conferences and outreach to key stakeholders, including creating educational materials for patient advocacy groups and interprofessional practice.
社会心理因素会影响糖尿病治疗效果,但医疗保健系统在满足这些需求方面仍准备不足。以糖尿病患者(PWD)的经历为中心的研究可为项目实施、政策制定及合作关系提供参考,以满足社会心理护理需求。糖尿病、痛苦与差异(3D)研究的目标是量化大型学术医疗中心中糖尿病患者的社会心理护理需求,深入了解社会心理因素如何影响糖尿病治疗效果,并确定社会心理护理的可改变决定因素。
3D研究正在从密歇根大学医学中心的卡斯韦尔糖尿病登记处招募1型糖尿病(T1D)、2型糖尿病(T2D)、成人隐匿性自身免疫性糖尿病(LADA)和妊娠期糖尿病(GD)患者。3D研究采用解释性序列混合方法设计,分为两个阶段。第一阶段(P1:目标样本量n = 500,于2023年7月开始)包括一项在线调查,以量化各种社会心理因素(如糖尿病相关痛苦、抑郁、耻辱感)的患病率并检查其相关性。该调查通过与糖尿病患者协商进行了完善。第二阶段(P2)包括对40名P1受访者进行半结构化电话访谈,采用基于人口统计学特征和社会心理调查测量结果的最大差异抽样方法进行招募。P2将探索一系列因素(如患者与提供者的沟通、社会支持、护理的障碍/促进因素)。截至目前,已有573人(回复率5%)完成了P1。2024年3月,我们确定了P1受访者的目标样本(n = 65)以招募进入P2。所有数据收集工作于2024年9月完成。分析将包括定量线性和逻辑回归,以了解P1中社会心理结果的相关性,以及定性内容分析,以阐明P2中的潜在干预点。
本研究已获得密歇根大学机构审查委员会批准(HUM00223735)。方案材料可在https://osf.io/yfz6b/获取。本研究的结果将通过同行评审出版物、会议报告以及向关键利益相关者进行宣传等方式进行传播,包括为患者倡导团体创建教育材料和开展跨专业实践。