Diabetes distress in Indian children with type 1 diabetes mellitus and their mothers
Author:
Lohiya Nirali N.1, Kajale Neha A.2, Lohiya Nikhil N.2, Khadilkar Vaman V.2, Gondhalekar Ketan2, Khadilkar Anuradha2
Affiliation:
1. Developmental and Behavioural Pediatrics , Dr. D. Y. Patil Medical College Hospital and Research Centre , Pune , Maharashtra , India 2. Growth and Pediatric Endocrine , Hirabai Cowasji Jehangir Medical Research Institute , Pune , Maharashtra , India
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Children and their mothers, who are usually the primary caregivers, are likely to be distressed due to type 1 diabetes (T1DM).
Objectives
(1) To assess diabetes-specific distress (DD) perceived by children and adolescents with T1DM and their mothers and association of distress between children and mothers. (2) To study the association of diabetes distress with glycemic control and disease duration.
Subjects
Children and adolescents with T1DM over eight years and their mothers.
Methods
Clinical data were recorded. DD was assessed by Problem Associated in Diabetes-Pediatric (PAID-Peds) (range 0–80) and Problem Associated in Diabetes-Parents Revised (PAID-PR) (range 0–72) questionnaires (higher scores indicate higher distress); administered to children and mothers, respectively. Sub-dimensions in questionnaires included diabetes-related emotional problems, and treatment-, food-, and social support-related problems. Correlation analysis (Spearman’s) was performed, and a paired t-test was used to compare PAID-Peds and PAID-PR (SPSS 25).
Results
Mean PAID-Peds and PAID-PR scores in 67 children and mothers were 24.4 ± 18.1 and 31.9 ± 21.5, respectively (p=0.009), and a significant correlation was noted between their scores (R=0.45, p=0.001). PAID-Peds score was positively associated with HbA1c (R=0.25, p=0.04). Diabetes-related emotional problems of mothers and children (R=0.38, p=0.003), treatment problems (R=0.5, p=0.001), and food problems (R=0.24, p=0.05) correlated positively. Subdimension scores were significantly different in children and mothers except in the social support domain.
Conclusion
DD was higher in mothers than children; higher distress in children was associated with poor metabolic control. Evaluation of DD needs to be performed in children with T1DM.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health
Reference43 articles.
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