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      Diabetes Attitudes, Wishes and Needs second study (DAWN2™): Cross-national benchmarking indicators for family members living with people with diabetes

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          Abstract

          The second Diabetes Attitudes, Wishes and Needs (DAWN2) study examined the experiences of family members of people with diabetes for benchmarking and identifying unmet needs or areas for improvement to assist family members and those with diabetes to effectively self-manage. In total, 2057 family members of people with diabetes participated in an online, telephone or in-person survey designed to assess the impact of diabetes on family life, family support for people with diabetes and educational and community support. Supporting a relative with diabetes was perceived as a burden by 35.3% (range across countries 10.6-61.7%) of respondents. Over half of respondents [51.4% (22.5-76.0%)] rated their quality of life as 'good' or 'very good'. However, distress about the person with diabetes was high, with 61.3% (31.5-86.4%) worried about hypoglycaemia. The impact of diabetes on aspects of life was felt by 51.8% (46.9-58.6%). The greatest negative effect was on emotional well-being [44.6% (31.8-63.0%)], although depression was less common [11.6% (4.2-20.0%)]. Many respondents did not know how to help the person with diabetes [37.1% (17.5-53.0%)] and wanted to be more involved in their care [39.4% (15.5-61.7%)]. Participation in diabetes educational programmes was low [23.1% (9.4-43.3%)], although most of those who participated found them helpful [72.1% (42.1-90.3%)]. Diabetes has a negative impact on family members of people with diabetes. DAWN2 provides benchmarking indicators of family members' psychosocial needs that will help identify the support required for, and from, them to improve the lives of people with diabetes and their families. © 2013 The Authors. Diabetic Medicine © 2013 Diabetes UK.

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          Most cited references31

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          Applied Longitudinal Data Analysis : Modeling Change and Event Occurrence

          Change is constant in everyday life. Infants crawl and then walk, children learn to read and write, teenagers mature in myriad ways, and the elderly become frail and forgetful. Beyond these natural processes and events, external forces and interventions instigate and disrupt change: test scores may rise after a coaching course, drug abusers may remain abstinent after residential treatment. By charting changes over time and investigating whether and when events occur, researchers reveal the temporal rhythms of our lives. This book is concerned with behavioral, social, and biomedical sciences. It offers a presentation of two of today's most popular statistical methods: multilevel models for individual change and hazard/survival models for event occurrence (in both discrete- and continuous-time). Using data sets from published studies, the book takes you step by step through complete analyses, from simple exploratory displays that reveal underlying patterns through sophisticated specifications of complex statistical models.
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            Psychological experience of parents of children with type 1 diabetes: a systematic mixed-studies review.

            The purpose of this review is to describe the prevalence of psychological distress in parents of children with type 1 diabetes (T1DM), the relationship between parental psychological distress and health outcomes, and parents' psychological experience of having a child with T1DM. Clinical and research implications are presented.
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              The Diabetes Empowerment Scale-Short Form (DES-SF).

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Diabetic Medicine
                Diabet. Med.
                Wiley
                07423071
                July 2013
                July 2013
                June 23 2013
                : 30
                : 7
                : 778-788
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Edmonton Clinic Health Academy; University of Alberta; Edmonton; AB; Canada
                [2 ]Consorzio Mario Negri Sud; Santa Maria Imbaro; Chieti; Italy
                [3 ]Human Development and Health; Faculty of Medicine; University of Southampton; Southampton; UK
                [4 ]Steno Diabetes Center; Gentofte; Denmark
                [5 ]Research Institute Diabetes; Diabetes Zentrum Mergentheim; Bad Mergentheim; Germany
                [6 ]Bharti Hospital and BRIDE; Karnal; India
                [7 ]University of Antwerp; Antwerp; Belgium
                [8 ]Tilburg University; Tilburg; the Netherlands
                [9 ]Novo Nordisk; Copenhagen; Denmark
                [10 ]Loyola University Maryland; Baltimore; MD; USA
                Article
                10.1111/dme.12239
                23701236
                5ab2d1d5-2c5a-4cc8-b71f-58cbb68259e5
                © 2013

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

                History

                Genetics
                Genetics

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