2型糖尿病合并高血压患者慢性疾病自我管理的潜在特征

Donghwan Lee, Qing Yang, Matthew J Crowley, Daniel Hatch, Gina Pennington, Doreen Matters, Ryan J Shaw
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摘要

目的:研究2型糖尿病和高血压患者在健康素养、疾病知识、自我效能、疾病困扰、自我护理感知和药物使用等方面的慢性疾病自我管理潜在特征。方法本横断面研究利用了EXTEND试验中220名参与者的基线数据。基于健康素养、疾病知识、自我效能感、疾病困扰、感知自我护理和药物使用等属性,采用潜在特征分析来识别不同的慢性疾病自我管理特征。分析社会人口学和临床数据以探讨与这些概况的关联。结果发现3种类型:“高困扰”(18.1%),表现为疾病困扰程度高,用药得分高,用药行为不一致程度高;“高健康知识”(38.6%),具有较高的健康素养和疾病知识;“高自我效能”(43.3%),表现出较高的自我效能感和自我照顾感。不同人群的糖化血红蛋白水平存在显著差异,高痛苦组的糖化血红蛋白水平最高。种族认同和社会经济因素与档案成员显著相关。本研究强调了合并糖尿病和高血压患者慢性疾病自我管理的复杂性。针对个人在疾病管理中面临的独特挑战采取量身定制的多方面干预措施,对于改善临床结果和促进卫生公平至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Chronic Illness Self-Management Latent Profiles in Individuals With Comorbid Type 2 Diabetes and Hypertension.

PurposeThe purpose of the study was to identify chronic illness self-management latent profiles based on health literacy, disease knowledge, self-efficacy, disease distress, perceived self-care, and medication use among individuals with type 2 diabetes and hypertension.MethodsThis cross-sectional study utilized baseline data from 220 participants in the EXTEND trial. Latent profile analysis was employed to identify distinct chronic illness self-management profiles based on attributes such as health literacy, disease knowledge, self-efficacy, disease distress, perceived self-care, and medication use. Sociodemographic and clinical data were analyzed to explore associations with these profiles.ResultsThree profiles were identified: "high distress" (18.1%), characterized by high disease distress and a high medication use score, indicating greater inconsistency in medication-taking behaviors; "high health knowledge" (38.6%), with high health literacy and disease knowledge; and "high self-efficacy" (43.3%), exhibiting high self-efficacy and perceived self-care. Significant differences in A1C levels were observed across profiles, with the high distress group showing the highest A1C levels. Racial identity and socioeconomic factors were significantly associated with profile membership.DiscussionThis study underscores the complexity of chronic illness self-management in individuals with comorbid diabetes and hypertension. Tailored, multifaceted interventions addressing the unique challenges individuals face in managing their illnesses are crucial for improving clinical outcomes and promoting health equity.

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