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Quality of care in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes patients’ and healthcare professionals’ perspectives / Lena Hanberger.

Hanberger, Lena, 1957- (författare)
Ludvigsson, Johnny (preses)
Samuelsson, Ulf (preses)
Nordfeldt, Sam (preses)
Holl, Reinhard (opponent)
Linköpings universitet Institutionen för klinisk och experimentell medicin (utgivare)
Linköpings universitet Hälsouniversitetet (utgivare)
Publicerad: Linköping : Linköping University Electronic Press, 2010
Engelska 1 onlineresurs (74 sidor)
Serie: Linköping University Medical Dissertations, 0345-0082 0345-0082 ; 1208
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  • E-bokAvhandling(Diss. (sammanfattning) Linköping : Linköpings universitet, 2010)
Sammanfattning Ämnesord
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  • Background: Type 1 diabetes is a chronic disease for which there is currently no cure, and high quality care is essential if acute and long-term complications are to be avoided. Many children and adolescents have inadequate metabolic control with increased risk for complications later in life, and adolescent girls have reported low quality of life. Differences in metabolic control between treatment centres have been found but the reasons for this are unclear. Diabetes is a largely self-managed disease. Patient education is central to successful self-management but little is known about how to make best use of diabetes communities on the Internet and integrate them into a practitioner-driven service. Aim: The main objective of this thesis was to gain better understanding of how to improve the quality of diabetes care for children and adolescents, aiming to have near-normal blood glucose, to prevent both acute and late complications and to have good quality of life. Methods: The geographic populations of two paediatric centres (n=400) received validated questionnaires on perceived quality of care and Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL). An intervention with a web portal containing diabetes-related information and social networking functions was carried out within the same population. Clinical variables from 18 651 outpatient visits registered in the Swedish paediatric diabetes quality registry, SWEDIABKIDS were analysed. Using data from SWEDIABKIDS, five centres with the lowest mean HbA1c, five with the highest, and five with the largest decrease in centre mean HbA1c between 2003 and 2007 were identified. Team members (n=128) were asked about structure, process, policy, and the messages given to patients about important diabetes issues. 
  • Results: Specific areas that were identified as needing improvement included information about self-care, waiting time at outpatient clinics and for treatment, and access to care. Diabetes seemed to reduce HRQOL. Subjects with better metabolic control and with higher frequency of injections reported slightly higher HRQOL, as did those living with both parents compared to those with separated parents. Only 35% of children and adolescents with diabetes in Sweden had an HbA1c level below the treatment target value. Mean HbA1c showed a correlation with mean insulin dose, diabetes duration, and age. A difference between centres was found, but this could not be explained by differences in insulin dose, diabetes duration, or age. Adolescent girls reported lower HRQOL, as did parents of girls aged < 8 years. Girls also had poorer metabolic control, especially during adolescence. In teams with the lowest and the most decreased mean HbA1c, members gave a clear message to patients and parents and had a lower HbA1c target value. Members of these teams appeared more engaged, with a more positive attitude and a greater sense of working as a team. Members of teams with the highest mean HbA1c gave a vaguer message, felt they needed clearer guidelines, and had a perception of poor collaboration within the team. High insulin dose, large centre population, and larger teams also seemed to characterize diabetes centres with low mean HbA1c. The most frequently visited pages on the web portal were the social networking pages, such as blogs, stories and discussions, followed by the diabetes team pages. Those who used the portal most actively were younger, had shorter diabetes duration, and lower HbA1c, and were more often girls. The web portal was not found to have any significant beneficial or adverse effects on HRQOL, empowerment or metabolic control. 
  • Conclusions: The quality of diabetes care for children and adolescents in Sweden is not sufficiently good and needs to improve further if complications in later life are to be avoided. Psychosocial support for children and adolescents with diabetes should be appropriate for age and gender. The attitudes of the members in the diabetes care team and the message they give to patients and their parents seem to influence metabolic control in children and adolescents. A clear and consistent message from a unified team appears to have beneficial effects on metabolic control. A web portal that includes comprehensive information about diabetes, and the opportunity to communicate with other people with diabetes and with healthcare professionals may be a useful complement to traditional patient education tools. Members of the diabetes team should encourage its use. 

Ämnesord

Diabetes mellitus, type 1  (MeSH)
Health status  (MeSH)
Patient education as topic  (MeSH)
Patient satisfaction  (MeSH)
Pediatrics  (MeSH)
Quality of health care  (MeSH)
Quality of life  (MeSH)
Hemoglobin A, glycosylated  -- metabolism (MeSH)
Medical and Health Sciences  (ssif)
Clinical Medicine  (ssif)
Pediatrics  (ssif)
Medicin och hälsovetenskap  (ssif)
Klinisk medicin  (ssif)
Pediatrik  (ssif)
MEDICINE  (svep)
Dermatology and venerology,clinical genetics, internal medicine  (svep)
Internal medicine  (svep)
Paediatric medicine  (svep)
MEDICIN  (svep)
Dermatologi och venerologi, klinisk genetik, invärtesmedicin  (svep)
Invärtesmedicin  (svep)
Pediatrisk medicin  (svep)
Barn med diabetes  -- behandling (sao)

Genre

government publication  (marcgt)

Indexterm och SAB-rubrik

type 1 diabetes
pediatric
quality of care
HbA1c
quality of life
patient education
e-health
Veod Diabetes

Klassifikation

616.462 (DDC)
Veod (kssb/8)
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