Comfort Victoria, Burns Erin N, Grover Alexis K, Reed-Harrington Lillian A, Fastring Danielle
College of Osteopathic Medicine, William Carey University, Hattiesburg, USA.
Cureus. 2025 May 27;17(5):e84910. doi: 10.7759/cureus.84910. eCollection 2025 May.
Background Effective patient-provider communication is critical for managing chronic diseases like diabetes mellitus (DM). This study examines whether patient attitudes toward their healthcare providers influence diabetes management and compliance, comparing individuals with poorly managed diabetes mellitus (PM DM) and those without DM (No DM). Methods Data from the All of Us Research Program was analyzed. After excluding incomplete responses, the final sample included 1903 PM DM patients and 94,218 No DM patients. Patient perceptions of respect, involvement in medical decision making, and provider interactions were assessed. Bivariate analysis was used to identify responses that were independently associated with PM DM. Variables found to be independently associated with PM DM at p<0.10 were entered into a multivariable model, and backwards stepwise binary logistic regression was used to find the model of best fit. Variables found to be significant (p<0.05) in the multivariable model were retained. Results Patients who felt disrespected by providers were significantly more likely to have poorly managed diabetes (OR = 1.396, 95% CI: 1.189, 1.639, p<0.05). Counterintuitively, patients who reported always being asked for their opinion in treatment decisions were likely to have PM DM (OR = 1.466, 95% CI: 1.235, 1.740, p<0.05). Patients who were not nervous to see their provider were also more likely to have PM DM (OR = 1.365, 95% CI: 1.152, 1.618, p<0.05). Conclusion Findings suggest that positive provider interaction does not always translate to better disease control. Future studies should explore how communication styles and shared decision-making impact long-term adherence to diabetes treatment.
背景 有效的医患沟通对于管理糖尿病等慢性病至关重要。本研究比较了糖尿病管理不善(PM DM)患者和无糖尿病(No DM)患者,以检验患者对医疗服务提供者的态度是否会影响糖尿病管理和依从性。 方法 对“我们所有人”研究计划的数据进行了分析。在排除不完整的回答后,最终样本包括1903名PM DM患者和94218名No DM患者。评估了患者对尊重、参与医疗决策以及与医疗服务提供者互动的看法。采用双变量分析来确定与PM DM独立相关的回答。在p<0.10时发现与PM DM独立相关的变量被纳入多变量模型,并使用向后逐步二元逻辑回归来找到最佳拟合模型。在多变量模型中发现具有显著性(p<0.05)的变量被保留。 结果 感到受到医疗服务提供者不尊重的患者糖尿病管理不善的可能性显著更高(OR = 1.396,95% CI:1.189,1.639,p<0.05)。与直觉相反,报告在治疗决策中总是被征求意见的患者更有可能患有PM DM(OR = 1.466,95% CI:1.235,1.740,p<0.05)。见到医疗服务提供者时不紧张的患者也更有可能患有PM DM(OR = 1.365,95% CI:1.152,1.618,p<0.05)。 结论 研究结果表明,积极的医患互动并不总是转化为更好的疾病控制。未来的研究应探索沟通方式和共同决策如何影响糖尿病治疗的长期依从性。