It might also help clinicians and parents identify specific areas in which parents may improve their
involvement in diabetes management even as they allow their child to share or assume responsibility for regimen tasks.
Alternatively, parents may demonstrate emotional support without providing the actual collaborative assistance needed for the child to develop
competence in diabetes management.
This study provides a useful step in advancing our understanding of the nature of parent
involvement in diabetes management, and the mechanisms by which parent behaviors may influence diabetes outcomes.
Parental involvement
in diabetes management tasks: Relationships to blood glucose monitoring adherence and metabolic control in young adolescents with insulin - dependent diabetes mellitus.
We also hypothesized that the effect of collaborative parent involvement on outcomes may be greater for older youth or for youth who have a greater level of responsibility for diabetes management, as these parenting behaviors facilitate the youth's ability to appropriately manage a transition
in diabetes management responsibility.
Richard Feinman is principal author of the 26 - author comprehensive review «Dietary carbohydrate restriction as the first
approach in diabetes management: Critical review and evidence base» His recent book «The World Turned Upside Down.
An important protective factor for preventing these adverse outcomes is the extent to which parents can remain
involved in diabetes management in ways that are constructive and helpful rather than counterproductive (Anderson et al., 1990, 1997; Anderson, Brackett, Ho, & Laffel, 1999; Anderson & Coyne, 1993; Anderson & Rubin, 2002; Anderson, Wolf, Burkhart, Cornell, & Bacon, 1989; LaGreca et al., 1990; Wysocki, 1993; Wysocki et al., 1996, 2000).
An intervention to promote family
teamwork in Diabetes management tasks: Relationships among parental involvement, adherence to blood glucose monitoring, and glycemic control in young adolescents with type 1 diabetes.
Korus set out to investigate the use of resistant starch as a partial replacer for corn starch in gluten - free bread, since it aids functioning of the digestive tract, microbial flora, blood cholesterol levels and can
help in diabetes management.
Having both parents (or one parent plus another caregiver) involved
in the diabetes management process will help keep treatment consistent and also provide support as you deal with struggles over shots and blood tests.
A team directed by Dr. Wolpert is developing software for analyzing continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) data to identify problem
areas in diabetes management and determine optimal alarms for out - of - target glucose measurements.
A CSIRO study published in 2015 found that both higher carbohydrate (around 220 grams carbohydrate per day) and lower carbohydrate (around 75 grams carbohydrate per day) diets produced
improvements in diabetes management, but this wasn't any old «low - carb» diet — it was high in dietary fibre and unsaturated fats.
«What this generally means is that an innocent - sounding useful course called «
Advances in Diabetes Management» may mysteriously have as the correct quiz answers (the answers that will earn you CME credit) those that promote pharmaceuticals.»
Coursework in Adult and Family Health,
Coursework in Diabetes Management, Coursework in Women's Health, Coursework in Acute Care Nursing, Coursework in Mental Health.
As such, the measure may be used both to advance our understanding of the role of the parent — child
relationship in diabetes management, as well as the effectiveness of behavioral interventions designed to promote improved parent — child collaboration.
Conclusions This brief youth - report measure of parent collaborative involvement assesses a unique dimension of parent involvement
in diabetes management associated with important youth outcomes.
An office - based intervention aimed at maintaining parent - adolescent teamwork
in diabetes management tasks, without increasing diabetes - related family conflict, assisted youth to achieve better metabolic control and decreased parent - child conflict.
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.
Dietary carbohydrate restriction as the first approach
in diabetes management: Critical review and evidence base.
«Quinoa has also been studied for its role
in diabetes management and hypertension,» said Toups.
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).
During adolescence, the challenge for families is to maintain a level of involvement
in diabetes management that supports the adolescent's growing independence and autonomy, while making certain that daily diabetes management tasks are completed competently (Anderson, Ho, Brackett, & Laffel, 1999; Sheeber, Hops, & Davis, 2001; Wiebe et al., 2005; Wysocki et al., 1996).
Parental involvement
in diabetes management tasks: Relationships to blood - glucose monitoring, adherence, and metabolic control in young adolescents with IDDM
Parents in the FT group maintained or increased involvement
in diabetes management tasks, especially BG monitoring, with no increase in diabetes - specific family conflict [14].
While greater parental involvement
in diabetes management is clearly associated with better diabetes adjustment, adherence, and health outcomes (Anderson et al., 1990, 1997, 1999; Holmes et al., 2006; Ingersoll et al., 1986; LaGreca et al., 1990, 1995; Wiebe et al., 2005; Wysocki et al., 1996), overly intrusive parenting could contribute to negative psychosocial and health outcomes (Barber, 2002).
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.
Building on previous research addressing the degree of parent involvement
in diabetes management tasks, the CPI provides a new tool to assess the collaborative nature of parent involvement in diabetes management.
While these measures all represent important aspects of parental involvement
in diabetes management, none were designed to measure behaviors indicative of a collaborative style of involvement.
In previous research addressing parental involvement
in diabetes management, the construct has typically been defined either as instrumental support (actual diabetes management assistance) or affective support (availability of and satisfaction with support) with various scales developed to measure these constructs (Hanna, 2006).