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Better Diabetes Self-Care might not mean
lower Blood Sugar
Newswise — People with diabetes who feel
they have better control over life events
are more likely to take good care of
themselves and to believe they have the
condition under control, but these factors
do not translate to improved blood sugar
levels, according to a new study of 1,034
adults.
Participants’ responses to survey items on
their risk tolerance, concern about their
future and beliefs about their longevity had
no correlation to clinical measures of their
hemoglobin A1c levels, which reflect average
blood glucose (or blood sugar) during the
previous two to three months.
The study, which appears online in the
journal Health Services Research, also found
no differences by race or Hispanic ethnicity
in how people took charge of their
self-care.
People are not always adherent in managing
their diabetes care, which affects overall
health and the risk of diabetic
complications, said lead study author Frank
Sloan, Ph.D.
“What we are able to do here is bring some
new measures to bear,” said Sloan, a
professor of health policy and management at
the Center for Health Policy at Duke
University.
Some people believe that whatever they do,
they have no control over their diabetes;
others are very tolerant of the risks of
diabetes; and, some have a philosophy that
they will live for today and not care about
the future, Sloan said. “One result that
comes through is that people who have
self-control over life in general are more
likely to adhere,” he said.
“This area of study is valuable as we
attempt to better understand the
relationship between how people from all
ethnic and cultural backgrounds perceive
their destinies with diabetes,” said Sue
McLaughlin, a registered dietitian and
president of health care and education with
the American Diabetes Association.
“This study illustrates the insidious nature
of hyperglycemia: it is a silent and deadly
killer,” added Miller, who had no
affiliation with the study. Many people with
diabetes assume they are in good health
because they do not feel bad, she said.
Health Services Research is the official
journal of the AcademyHealth and is
published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. on
behalf of the Health Research and
Educational Trust. HSR is available online
at
www.blackwell-synergy.com/loi/hesr.
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