Socio-Demographic and Clinical Determinants of Self-Care in Adults with Type 2 Diabetes: A Multicentre Observational Study

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Degree type

Discipline

Subject

diabetes mellitus
type 2 diabetes mellitus
self-management
chronic disease
self-efficacy
risk factors
health education
Behavioral Medicine
Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism
Medical Humanities
Medicine and Health Sciences
Nursing
Preventive Medicine

Funder

Grant number

License

Copyright date

Distributor

Author

Ausili, Davide
Rossi, Emanuela
Rebora, Paola
Luciani, Michela
Tonoli, Luca
Ballerini, Enrico
Androni, Silvia
Vellone, Ercole
Di Mauro, Stefania

Contributor

Abstract

Aims To describe self-care as defined by the Middle Range Theory of Self-Care of Chronic Illness and to identify clinical and socio-demographic determinants in a T2DM population. Methods A multicentre observational cross-sectional study was conducted involving 540 adults with a confirmed diagnosis of T2DM from six outpatient diabetes services in Italy. Socio-demographic and clinical data were collected from medical records. The Self-Care of Diabetes Inventory (SCODI) was used to measure self-care maintenance, monitoring, management, and confidence dimensions. For each separate scale, scores were standardized 0–100 with higher SCODI scores indicating better self-care; a score ≥ 70 is adequate. Multiple quantile regression models were performed to identify determinants of each self-care dimension. Results Self-care maintenance (median = 81.3) and self-care confidence (median = 79.5) were adequate in most of the subjects. Self-care monitoring was adequate in only half of the sample (median = 70.6). Self-care management was poor (median = 59.4). Lower self-care maintenance was associated with lower self-care confidence (p < 0.001). Lower self-care monitoring was associated with being male (p < 0.001), having lower self-care confidence (p < 001), and having diabetes for < 10 years (p < 0.001). Lower self-care management was associated with being male (p = 0.002), being older (p = 0.005), having a low income (p = 0.030), being employed (p = 0.008), having missed diabetes education in the last year (p = 0.002), and lower self-care confidence (p < 0.0001). Lower self-care confidence was associated with having diabetes for < 10 years (p = 0.008), and having at least one comorbid condition (p = 0.006). Conclusions Determinants of self-care maintenance, monitoring, management and confidence include both clinical and socio-demographic variables. Modifiable determinants such as self-care confidence and diabetes self-care management education could be used to tailor interventions to improve diabetes self-care.

Advisor

Date Range for Data Collection (Start Date)

Date Range for Data Collection (End Date)

Digital Object Identifier

Series name and number

Publication date

2018-04-05

Volume number

Issue number

Publisher

Publisher DOI

relationships.isJournalIssueOf

Comments

Recommended citation

Collection