Sentences with phrase «child diabetes management»

Items tested for the Collaborative Parent Involvement (CPI) Scale included the previously retained nine items plus the seven additional items querying parental knowledge of child diabetes management activities and processes.

Not exact matches

Making sure they all know the diabetes management plan will make your child's care as coordinated as possible.
They'll also teach you and your child about diabetes and, with recommendations from all the team members, make a diabetes management plan.
Even before we discharge your child from the hospital, we go over his or her treatment plan and schedule a follow up within the next week so that we can see how everything is going, make any necessary adjustments and help your child get on the right track for diabetes management.
A parent needs to enforce diabetes management, which can include regular testing and giving shots to a child who cries, resists, and gets angry.
All children and young people should have the right to receive the vital checks for good diabetes management, currently only 2.6 per cent do so (National Diabetes diabetes management, currently only 2.6 per cent do so (National Diabetes Diabetes Audit)..
Just imagine that you can use this simple and effective tool for pain management, addictions, weight loss, allergies, children's issues, vision, headaches, panic, anxiety, asthma, trauma, PTSD, abuse, depression, dyslexia, carpal tunnel, anger, ADD - ADHD, fears, phobias, eating disorders, OCD, blood pressure, diabetes, neuropathy, fear of flying, claustrophobia, agoraphobia, anorexia, bulimia and more..
It also pays for preventive and comprehensive health services for poor children, including immunizations, screening for hearing and vision problems and management of chronic conditions like asthma and diabetes.
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The daily management regimens and psychosocial aspect of TIDM bring attention to the child with diabetes.
Parents of adolescent patients with improved metabolic control rated their children's psychological and physical well - being, and quality of life higher than parents of adolescent patients without improved diabetes management.
Smoking status, diabetes management and blood pressure control all saw improvements but some areas slipped, such as child immunisations below 36 months, cervical screening and overweight and obesity, as measured by BMI.
The Influence of Initial Management and Family Stress on Metabolic Control in Children with Type 1 Diabetes
Family Spirit, an evidence - based, culturally - tailored home visiting intervention for Native American mothers and children, and Together on Diabetes, a family - based diabetes prevention and management program for Native American youth, will lead this wDiabetes, a family - based diabetes prevention and management program for Native American youth, will lead this wdiabetes prevention and management program for Native American youth, will lead this workshop.
Participants were 78 mother — child dyads (41 males, 37 females) from the follow - up phase of a larger study of maternal involvement in diabetes management (see Palmer et al., 2004; Wiebe et al., 2005 for descriptions of initial study).
Each child and a parent completed an updated version of the Diabetes Family Conflict Scale (19) to evaluate the degree of family conflict in 19 management tasks.
Further, in a study evaluating a parent — adolescent teamwork approach to diabetes management, adolescents in the intervention group reported significantly less parent — child conflict related to diabetes management [measured by the Diabetes Family Behavior Checklist (DFBC)-RSB- and were in better metabolic control (Anderson, Ho, Brackett, & Laffeldiabetes management, adolescents in the intervention group reported significantly less parent — child conflict related to diabetes management [measured by the Diabetes Family Behavior Checklist (DFBC)-RSB- and were in better metabolic control (Anderson, Ho, Brackett, & Laffeldiabetes management [measured by the Diabetes Family Behavior Checklist (DFBC)-RSB- and were in better metabolic control (Anderson, Ho, Brackett, & LaffelDiabetes Family Behavior Checklist (DFBC)-RSB- and were in better metabolic control (Anderson, Ho, Brackett, & Laffel, 1999).
For children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes, the style in which their parents are involved in the daily disease management may be crucial to improving their glycemic control (1 — 4).
More specifically, in families where no one assumes responsibility for diabetes management, children were in worse metabolic control, a finding that is consistent with that of Anderson et al. (1990).
When parents do not take responsibility for diabetes management themselves or can not agree with the child regarding who has responsibility for each specific regimen components, it seems intuitive that children may be in worse metabolic control.
Furthermore, the complexities of diabetes management require ongoing parental involvement in care throughout childhood with developmentally appropriate family teamwork between the growing child / teen and parent in order to maintain adherence and to prevent deterioration in glycemic control (14,15).
During the transition into adolescence, a developmental period marked by significant decline in diabetes outcomes, the primary responsibility for diabetes management shifts from parent to child (Wiebe et al., 2014).
Encourage developmentally appropriate family involvement in diabetes management tasks for children and adolescents, recognizing that premature transfer of diabetes care to the child can result in nonadherence and deterioration in glycemic control.
Parent involvement in type 1 diabetes (T1DM) care leads to improved adherence; however, the manner in which parents approach illness management interactions with children must also be considered.
We recruited mothers for our sample because evidence suggests that the mother is generally the primary caregiver responsible for the child's diabetes management, and mothers typically report more diabetes - related distress than fathers (Whittemore, Jaser, Chao, Jang, & Grey, 2012).
The latter measure was constructed specifically for this study to measure the frequency of oppositional and avoidance behaviors of children regarding diabetes management tasks.
Although child age did not moderate the relation between the other family functioning factors and metabolic control in this research, previous studies clearly document developmental changes in diabetes management responsibility (e.g., the shift of responsibilities from the parent to the adolescent; Anderson & Laffel, 1997).
For example, results from one study showed that children of married parents had better glycemic control than children from single, separated, or divorced parents, and this effect was partially mediated by blood glucose monitoring, an important part of diabetes management (Urbach et al., 2005).
Child report of parental negativity and criticism (related to diabetes management) was not predictive of metabolic control in younger children.
Both the parent and child completed this measure individually by reading 17 statements concerning diabetes management tasks and indicating which family member accepts responsibility for that specific task (i.e., parent, child, or both).
The age range for adolescents was 10 — 16 years, chosen to capture the developmental transition when responsibility for diabetes management begins shifting from parent to child (Anderson et al., 2002), and when glycemic control and adherence to the recommended treatment regimen often suffer a decline (Borus & Laffel, 2010).
Recent studies have shown that parental monitoring of adolescents» daily diabetes care — that is, information - seeking about their child's diabetes care behaviors and direct supervision and oversight of those activities [31]-- is a significant predictor of youth diabetes management and metabolic control [32 - 34].
In the context of diabetes management, research has shown that Latino parents report greater supervision of their children's diabetes regimen adherence (Gallegos - Macias, Macias, Kaufman, Skipper, & Kalishman, 2003), and parental support for diabetes care is associated with better diabetes outcomes among Latino youth (Hsin, La Greca, Valenzuela, Moine, & Delamater, 2010).
The association between paternal level of authoritativeness and diabetes control measures highlights the importance of fathers» involvement in children's diabetes management.
This resulted in elimination of five items that addressed parental support without a clearly collaborative component (that is, they addressed parent emotional support of the child's diabetes management, but did not clearly indicate the parent's involvement), three items that were redundant, and three items that were judged to be cognitively complex and therefore potentially problematic for pre-adolescents.
It provides a developmental and contextual perspective on changes in children's adjustment to diabetes and its management, which may inform medical and psychological treatment and support during transitional periods.
FRI scores predict parental distress related to child BMT (Phipps, Dunavant, Lensing, & Rai, 2005), child abuse potential among parents of children with developmental disabilities (Aniol, Mullins, Page, Boyd, & Chaney, 2004), and illness management for adolescents with diabetes (Naar - King, Podolski, Ellis, Frey, & Templin, 2006).
As parents and children negotiate responsibilities in diabetes management, and as these responsibilities change over time, it is likely that parent - adolescent conflict will develop.
Alternatively, parents may demonstrate emotional support without providing the actual collaborative assistance needed for the child to develop competence in diabetes management.
The Diabetes Self Management Profile using either the conventional or flexible regimen versions (depending on the child's diabetes management regimen) was used to measure diabetes treatment adherence (Diabetes Research in Children Network (DirecNet) Study Group, 2005; Harris et al.Diabetes Self Management Profile using either the conventional or flexible regimen versions (depending on the child's diabetes management regimen) was used to measure diabetes treatment adherence (Diabetes Research in Children Network (DirecNet) Study Group, 2005; Harris et aManagement Profile using either the conventional or flexible regimen versions (depending on the child's diabetes management regimen) was used to measure diabetes treatment adherence (Diabetes Research in Children Network (DirecNet) Study Group, 2005; Harris et al.diabetes management regimen) was used to measure diabetes treatment adherence (Diabetes Research in Children Network (DirecNet) Study Group, 2005; Harris et amanagement regimen) was used to measure diabetes treatment adherence (Diabetes Research in Children Network (DirecNet) Study Group, 2005; Harris et al.diabetes treatment adherence (Diabetes Research in Children Network (DirecNet) Study Group, 2005; Harris et al.Diabetes Research in Children Network (DirecNet) Study Group, 2005; Harris et al., 2000).
It may be useful to examine how children and parents share responsibility for diabetes management tasks over time, and how this evolves with medical regimen changes.
Updated adherence measures, similar to those developed by the Diabetes Research in Children Network (DirecNet) Study Group (2005), should be used as they should more accurately address the complexity of modern T1D management.
Nevertheless, it would also be instructive to determine whether parents who show a high level of collaborative involvement in diabetes management also show a high level of collaborative involvement in other dimensions of their child's life, such as school work or extracurricular activities.
CPI was not associated with parent level of diabetes management responsibility (parent report r = −.02, p =.85; child report r = −.04, p =.70).
The Charles H. Best Diabetes Centre promotes positive integration of diabetes management into the daily life of children, adolescents and young adults and their fDiabetes Centre promotes positive integration of diabetes management into the daily life of children, adolescents and young adults and their fdiabetes management into the daily life of children, adolescents and young adults and their families.
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