Clinical, behavioural and social indicators for poor glycaemic control around the time of transfer to adult care: a longitudinal study of 126 young people with diabetes

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Clinical, behavioural and social indicators for poor glycaemic control around the time of transfer to adult care: a longitudinal study of 126 young people with diabetes. / Castensøe-Seidenfaden, P.; Jensen, A. K.; Smedegaard, H.; Hommel, E.; Husted, G. R.; Pedersen-Bjergaard, U.; Teilmann, G.

In: Diabetic Medicine, Vol. 34, No. 5, 05.2017, p. 667-675.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Castensøe-Seidenfaden, P, Jensen, AK, Smedegaard, H, Hommel, E, Husted, GR, Pedersen-Bjergaard, U & Teilmann, G 2017, 'Clinical, behavioural and social indicators for poor glycaemic control around the time of transfer to adult care: a longitudinal study of 126 young people with diabetes', Diabetic Medicine, vol. 34, no. 5, pp. 667-675. https://doi.org/10.1111/dme.13318

APA

Castensøe-Seidenfaden, P., Jensen, A. K., Smedegaard, H., Hommel, E., Husted, G. R., Pedersen-Bjergaard, U., & Teilmann, G. (2017). Clinical, behavioural and social indicators for poor glycaemic control around the time of transfer to adult care: a longitudinal study of 126 young people with diabetes. Diabetic Medicine, 34(5), 667-675. https://doi.org/10.1111/dme.13318

Vancouver

Castensøe-Seidenfaden P, Jensen AK, Smedegaard H, Hommel E, Husted GR, Pedersen-Bjergaard U et al. Clinical, behavioural and social indicators for poor glycaemic control around the time of transfer to adult care: a longitudinal study of 126 young people with diabetes. Diabetic Medicine. 2017 May;34(5):667-675. https://doi.org/10.1111/dme.13318

Author

Castensøe-Seidenfaden, P. ; Jensen, A. K. ; Smedegaard, H. ; Hommel, E. ; Husted, G. R. ; Pedersen-Bjergaard, U. ; Teilmann, G. / Clinical, behavioural and social indicators for poor glycaemic control around the time of transfer to adult care: a longitudinal study of 126 young people with diabetes. In: Diabetic Medicine. 2017 ; Vol. 34, No. 5. pp. 667-675.

Bibtex

@article{2b076f6e001041a6b1a86c956ce35cfc,
title = "Clinical, behavioural and social indicators for poor glycaemic control around the time of transfer to adult care: a longitudinal study of 126 young people with diabetes",
abstract = "Aims: To describe and compare changes in glycaemic control in young people with Type 1 diabetes over time between the last 2 years in paediatric care and the first 2 years in adult care and to identify risk factors for poor glycaemic control.Methods: Our retrospective cohort study followed participants aged 14–22 years from 2 years before to 2 years after transfer from paediatric to adult care. Changes in glycaemic control were calculated using repeated measurements. We adjusted for gender, age at diabetes onset, age at transfer, duration of diabetes at transfer, gap (amount of time) between last paediatric and first adult visit, comorbidity, learning disability and/or mental health conditions and family structure. We examined associations between acute hospital admissions, low visit attendance rate, loss to follow-up and baseline HbA1c level.Results: Among 126 participants, the mean HbA1c level was 80 mmol/mol (9.4%) pre-transfer but decreased by an average of 3 mmol/mol (0.3%) each year post-transfer (P = 0.005). Young people with a learning disability and/or a mental health condition had worse glycaemic control (P = 0.041) and the mean HbA1c of those with divorced parents was 14 mmol/mol (1.2%) higher (P = 0.014). Almost one-third of participants were admitted to the hospital for acute diabetes care. Low visit attendance rate, high baseline HbA1c level, learning disability and/or mental health conditions and divorced parents predicted acute hospital admissions.Conclusions: Glycaemic control improved significantly after transfer to adult care, but the mean HbA1c level remained high. Future interventions should focus on young people with divorced parents, those with a learning disability and/or mental health condition and those who do not attend clinical visits to improve HbA1c levels and thereby reduce hospitalization rates.",
author = "P. Castens{\o}e-Seidenfaden and Jensen, {A. K.} and H. Smedegaard and E. Hommel and Husted, {G. R.} and U. Pedersen-Bjergaard and G. Teilmann",
year = "2017",
month = may,
doi = "10.1111/dme.13318",
language = "English",
volume = "34",
pages = "667--675",
journal = "Diabetic Medicine",
issn = "0742-3071",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Clinical, behavioural and social indicators for poor glycaemic control around the time of transfer to adult care: a longitudinal study of 126 young people with diabetes

AU - Castensøe-Seidenfaden, P.

AU - Jensen, A. K.

AU - Smedegaard, H.

AU - Hommel, E.

AU - Husted, G. R.

AU - Pedersen-Bjergaard, U.

AU - Teilmann, G.

PY - 2017/5

Y1 - 2017/5

N2 - Aims: To describe and compare changes in glycaemic control in young people with Type 1 diabetes over time between the last 2 years in paediatric care and the first 2 years in adult care and to identify risk factors for poor glycaemic control.Methods: Our retrospective cohort study followed participants aged 14–22 years from 2 years before to 2 years after transfer from paediatric to adult care. Changes in glycaemic control were calculated using repeated measurements. We adjusted for gender, age at diabetes onset, age at transfer, duration of diabetes at transfer, gap (amount of time) between last paediatric and first adult visit, comorbidity, learning disability and/or mental health conditions and family structure. We examined associations between acute hospital admissions, low visit attendance rate, loss to follow-up and baseline HbA1c level.Results: Among 126 participants, the mean HbA1c level was 80 mmol/mol (9.4%) pre-transfer but decreased by an average of 3 mmol/mol (0.3%) each year post-transfer (P = 0.005). Young people with a learning disability and/or a mental health condition had worse glycaemic control (P = 0.041) and the mean HbA1c of those with divorced parents was 14 mmol/mol (1.2%) higher (P = 0.014). Almost one-third of participants were admitted to the hospital for acute diabetes care. Low visit attendance rate, high baseline HbA1c level, learning disability and/or mental health conditions and divorced parents predicted acute hospital admissions.Conclusions: Glycaemic control improved significantly after transfer to adult care, but the mean HbA1c level remained high. Future interventions should focus on young people with divorced parents, those with a learning disability and/or mental health condition and those who do not attend clinical visits to improve HbA1c levels and thereby reduce hospitalization rates.

AB - Aims: To describe and compare changes in glycaemic control in young people with Type 1 diabetes over time between the last 2 years in paediatric care and the first 2 years in adult care and to identify risk factors for poor glycaemic control.Methods: Our retrospective cohort study followed participants aged 14–22 years from 2 years before to 2 years after transfer from paediatric to adult care. Changes in glycaemic control were calculated using repeated measurements. We adjusted for gender, age at diabetes onset, age at transfer, duration of diabetes at transfer, gap (amount of time) between last paediatric and first adult visit, comorbidity, learning disability and/or mental health conditions and family structure. We examined associations between acute hospital admissions, low visit attendance rate, loss to follow-up and baseline HbA1c level.Results: Among 126 participants, the mean HbA1c level was 80 mmol/mol (9.4%) pre-transfer but decreased by an average of 3 mmol/mol (0.3%) each year post-transfer (P = 0.005). Young people with a learning disability and/or a mental health condition had worse glycaemic control (P = 0.041) and the mean HbA1c of those with divorced parents was 14 mmol/mol (1.2%) higher (P = 0.014). Almost one-third of participants were admitted to the hospital for acute diabetes care. Low visit attendance rate, high baseline HbA1c level, learning disability and/or mental health conditions and divorced parents predicted acute hospital admissions.Conclusions: Glycaemic control improved significantly after transfer to adult care, but the mean HbA1c level remained high. Future interventions should focus on young people with divorced parents, those with a learning disability and/or mental health condition and those who do not attend clinical visits to improve HbA1c levels and thereby reduce hospitalization rates.

U2 - 10.1111/dme.13318

DO - 10.1111/dme.13318

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28099760

VL - 34

SP - 667

EP - 675

JO - Diabetic Medicine

JF - Diabetic Medicine

SN - 0742-3071

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 185239684