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Published in: Acta Diabetologica 7/2018

01-07-2018 | Original Article

Socio-demographic and clinical determinants of self-care in adults with type 2 diabetes: a multicentre observational study

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

Published in: Acta Diabetologica | Issue 7/2018

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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.
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Metadata
Title
Socio-demographic and clinical determinants of self-care in adults with type 2 diabetes: a multicentre observational study
Authors
Davide Ausili
Emanuela Rossi
Paola Rebora
Michela Luciani
Luca Tonoli
Enrico Ballerini
Silvia Androni
Ercole Vellone
Barbara Riegel
Stefania Di Mauro
Publication date
01-07-2018
Publisher
Springer Milan
Published in
Acta Diabetologica / Issue 7/2018
Print ISSN: 0940-5429
Electronic ISSN: 1432-5233
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00592-018-1135-x

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