| Literature DB >> 24472527 |
Emiel A Boogerd1, Cees Noordam, Chris M Verhaak.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Type 1 diabetes demands a complicated disease self-management by child and parents. The overwhelming task of combining every day parenting tasks with demands of taking care of a child with diabetes can have a profound impact on parents, often resulting in increased parenting stress. Tailored disease information, easy accessible communication with healthcare professionals and peer support are found to support parents to adequately cope with the disease and the disease self-management in everyday life. Internet can help facilitate these important factors in usual pediatric diabetes care. Therefore, we will develop a web-based patient portal in addition to usual pediatric diabetes care and subsequently evaluate its efficacy and feasibility. The web-based patient portal, called Sugarsquare, provides online disease information, and facilitates online parent-professional communication and online peer support. We hypothesize that parenting stress in parents of a child with type 1 diabetes will decrease by using Sugarsquare and that Sugarsquare will be feasible in this population. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24472527 PMCID: PMC3909406 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2431-14-24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Figure 1Screenshot of login page of Sugarsquare.
Means and standard deviations of the parent-reported measures of the PSI[38]
| Pre intervention | Post intervention | Pre intervention | Post intervention |
| 121.60 (17.16) | 85.27 (19.91) | 112.87 (14.35) | 109.08 (14.98) |
Background variables used in the Sugarsquare study
| Demographics | • Age and gender of the child |
| • Onset and duration of diabetes | |
| • Pen or pump treatment | |
| • Age, gender and educational level of the primary parent | |
| • Social economic status of the parents |
Primary and secondary outcome measures used in the Sugarsquare study
| | |
| Parenting stress | Parenting Stress Index- short form (PSI-SF [ |
| | |
| Parents’ psychosocial wellbeing | General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12 [ |
| Parents’ satisfaction of quality of diabetes care | Patients’ Evaluation of Quality of care- Diabetes (PEQ-D [ |
| Parents’ knowledge about diabetes (care) | Diabetes Knowledge Test (DKT [ |
| Parents’ treatment adherence | Morisky Medicine Adherence Scale (MMAS [ |
| Parents’ confidence in diabetes self-care | Confidence In Diabetes Self-care questionnaire (CIDS [ |
| Diabetes related conflicts | Diabetes Family Conflict Scale (DFCS [ |
| The impact of diabetes on the family | Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory - family impact scale (PedsQL FIS [ |
| The child’s quality of life | Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory - generic scale - parent report (PedsQL generic [ |
| The child’s health-related quality of life | Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory - diabetes module - parent report (PedsQL-DM [ |
| The child’s psychosocial well-being | Strength and difficulties questionnaire - parent report (SDQ [ |
Feasibility measures used in the Sugarsquare study
| Practicability (can they use it?) | • Percentage of users who logged in at least once |
| • Inventory of difficulties logging in | |
| • Inventory of downtime (inaccessibility) | |
| Acceptability (do they use it?) | • Percentage of users who logged in at least once and used all applications |
| • Duration of usage | |
| Demand (do they continue to use it?) | • Percentage of users who logged in repeatedly |
| Integration (does it fit with the treatment?) | • Evaluation of international guidelines for diabetes care (ISPAD/IDF/ADA) when using Sugarsquare |
Other measures used in the Sugarsquare study
| Medical parameters | • HbA1c |
| • Hospitals admissions due to glycemic disruptions |