AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on adolescents with type 1 diabetes (T1D) who face challenges in managing their condition, particularly due to increased risk-taking behaviors.
  • Researchers developed the Diabetes-Specific Risk-Taking Inventory (DSRI) to evaluate these risky self-management behaviors.
  • The DSRI was found to be reliable and valid, correlating with T1D care engagement and other risk factors, making it a useful tool for identifying high-risk behaviors in clinical settings.

Article Abstract

Objective: Among persons with type 1 diabetes (T1D), adolescents often experience the greatest challenge achieving optimal treatment engagement and glycemic targets. Risk-taking behaviors often increase during adolescence and may interfere with engagement in T1D care. We developed the Diabetes-Specific Risk-Taking Inventory (DSRI) to assess risky T1D self-management behaviors in adolescents with T1D. In the current study, we aimed to examine the DSRI's psychometric properties.

Research Design And Methods: We surveyed a national sample of 224 adolescents from the T1D Exchange registry (M age = 16.9 ± 1.1, 49% female, M A1c = 8.5% ± 1.3, 76.8% on insulin pumps) in a cross-sectional design. Participants completed the DSRI and measures of engagement, general risk-taking, and executive functioning and reported on incidence of severe hypoglycemia and diabetic ketoacidosis over the past year.

Results: The DSRI demonstrated reliability (internal consistency: α = 0.89; test-retest reliability: r = 0.86, p < 0.01). Concurrent validity was demonstrated through significant associations between the DSRI and T1D engagement (r = -0.75), general risk-taking (r = 0.57), executive dysfunction (r = 0.34), and report of severe hypoglycemia over the past year (r = 0.22). The DSRI accounted for unique variance in adolescents' most recent glycated hemoglobin, above and beyond other variables, indicating its incremental validity.

Conclusions: Overall, initial psychometrics suggest the DSRI is a reliable and valid measure of risks that adolescents may take with their T1D care. This innovative self-report measure has potential to be an actionable clinical tool to screen for high-risk behaviors not routinely assessed in T1D clinical care.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9588552PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pedi.13387DOI Listing

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