Self-Management Competence as a Predictor of Outcomes of Intensive Therapy or Usual Care in Youth With Type 1 Diabetes
- Tim Wysocki, PHD1,
- Michael A. Harris, PHD2,
- Karen Wilkinson, BSN, CDE1,
- Michelle Sadler, BSN, CDE2,
- Nelly Mauras, MD1 and
- Neil H. White, MD23
- 1Nemours Children’s Clinic, Jacksonville, Florida
- 2Department of Pediatrics, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri
- 3St. Louis Children’s Hospital, St. Louis, Missouri
- Address correspondence and reprint requests to Tim Wysocki, PhD, Nemours Children’s Clinic, 807 Childrens Way, Jacksonville, FL 32207. E-mail: twysocki{at}nemours.org.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE—This article evaluates prediction of HbA1c during an 18-month randomized trial of intensive therapy (IT) versus usual care (UC) for type 1 diabetes in 142 youth.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—Patients received a composite score for self-management competence (SMC) that combined standardized scores on baseline measures of diabetes knowledge, treatment adherence, and quality of health care interactions. They were categorized by tertiles split into low, moderate, and high SMC levels.
RESULTS—IT yielded very similar mean HbA1c levels in all three SMC groups. However, in UC patients, HbA1c increased markedly for low-SMC youth but not for moderate- and high-SMC youth during the trial. Compared with the mean HbA1c of their UC counterparts, low-SMC patients realized greater glycemic benefit from IT than did the moderate- or high-SMC youth. Baseline SMC was more strongly correlated with HbA1c for UC than IT.
CONCLUSIONS—All three SMC groups realized similar glycemic benefits from IT. The mean HbA1c levels of low-SMC patients in the UC group increased markedly over 18 months, whereas HbA1c levels of low-SMC patients in the IT group did not differ significantly from that of moderate- and high-SMC patients. Relative to their UC counterparts, low-SMC patients derived greater glycemic benefit from IT than did moderate- or high-SMC youth. SMC may be more critical to the success of UC than IT. Perhaps more importantly, patients should not be denied access to IT on the basis of limited competence in diabetes self-management.
- DCCT, Diabetes Control and Complications Trial
- DISC, Diabetes Information Survey for Children
- DSMP, Diabetes Self-Management Profile
- IT, intensive therapy
- PSQ, Physician Satisfaction Questionnaire
- SMC, self-management competence
- UC, usual care
Footnotes
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A table elsewhere in this issue shows conventional and Système International (SI) units and conversion factors for many substances.
See accompanying editorial, p. 2204.
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- Accepted February 3, 2003.
- Received October 28, 2002.
- DIABETES CARE











