Diabetes-related distress over the course of illness: results from the Diacourse study

Publication date

2015-12

Authors

Kasteleyn, M J
de Vries, L
van Puffelen, A L
Schellevis, F G
Rijken, Marcus JORCID 0000-0003-0914-5508ISNI 0000000394897746
Vos, Rimke CISNI 0000000387722390
Rutten, G. E. H. M.ORCID 0000-0001-5773-2614ISNI 0000000396068378
Diacourse study group

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

AIMS: To investigate the relationship between diabetes duration and diabetes-related distress and to examine the impact of micro- and macrovascular complications and blood glucose-lowering treatment on this relationship. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study in people with Type 2 diabetes who participated in the Dutch Diacourse study (n = 590) and completed the Problem Areas in Diabetes questionnaire. Data on diabetes duration, micro- and macrovascular complications and blood glucose-lowering treatment were collected. Multiple linear regression analysis was used to investigate the association between diabetes duration and diabetes-related distress, and to examine whether complications and treatment could explain this association. RESULTS: A significant linear and quadratic association between diabetes duration and diabetes-related distress was found (duration: β = 0.27, P = 0.005; duration(2) : β = -0.21, P = 0.030). The association between duration and distress could be explained by microvascular complications and insulin treatment, which were both more often present in people with a longer diabetes duration, and were associated with higher levels of diabetes-related distress (β = 0.20, P < 0.001 and β = 0.16, P = 0.006 respectively). Duration, age, gender, complications and treatment together explained 13.1% of the variance in distress. CONCLUSIONS: Diabetes duration was associated with diabetes-related distress. This association can be explained largely by the presence of diabetes-related microvascular complications and insulin treatment. Healthcare providers should focus on distress in people with Type 2 diabetes in different stages over the course of illness, especially when complications are present or when people are on insulin treatment. As well as diabetes duration, complications and blood glucose-lowering treatment, diabetes-related distress is likely to be influenced by many other factors.

Keywords

Taverne, Journal Article

Citation

Kasteleyn, M J, de Vries, L, van Puffelen, A L, Schellevis, F G, Rijken, M, Vos, R C, Rutten, G E H M & Diacourse study group 2015, 'Diabetes-related distress over the course of illness : results from the Diacourse study', Diabetic Medicine, vol. 32, no. 12, pp. 1617-24. https://doi.org/10.1111/dme.12743