Deviation from Developmentally Appropriate Self-Care Autonomy: Association with diabetes outcomes
Male
Analysis of Variance
Adolescent
Personality Inventory
Psychology, Adolescent
Age Factors
Reproducibility of Results
Psychology, Child
3. Good health
Hospitalization
Self Care
03 medical and health sciences
Cognition
Cross-Sectional Studies
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1
Treatment Outcome
0302 clinical medicine
Humans
Family
Female
Child
Social Behavior
DOI:
10.2337/diacare.19.2.119
Publication Date:
2007-03-05T22:51:27Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE
Treatment of IDDM in youth emphasized balancing children's self-care autonomy with their psychological maturity. However, few data exist to guide clinicians or parents, and little is known about correlates of deviations from this ideal.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS
In this cross-sectional study, IDDM self-care autonomy of 100 youth was assessed using two well-validated measures. Three measures of psychological maturity (cognitive function, social-cognitive development, and academic achievement) were also collected for each child. Composite indexes of self-care autonomy and of psychological maturity were formed, and the ratio of the self-care autonomy index to the psychological maturity index quantified each child's deviation from developmentally appropriate IDDM self-care autonomy. Based on these scores, participants were categorized as exhibiting constrained (lower tertile), appropriate (middle tertile), or excessive (higher tertile) self-care autonomy. Between-group differences in treatment adherence, diabetes knowledge, glycemic control, and hospitalization rates were explored.
RESULTS
Analysis of covariance controlling for age revealed that the excessive self-care autonomy group demonstrated less favorable treatment adherence, diabetes knowledge, hospitalization rates, and, marginally, glycemic control. Excessive self-care autonomy increased with age and was less common among intact two-parent families but was unrelated to other demographic factors.
CONCLUSIONS
The findings indicate caution about encouragement of maximal self-care autonomy among youth with IDDM and suggest that families who succeed in maintaining parental involvement in diabetes management may have better outcomes.
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