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Diabetes camp matters: Assessing families' views of their diabetes camp experience.

Jill Weissberg-BenchellKaren Rychlik
Published in: Pediatric diabetes (2017)
Parents reported higher levels of diabetes-specific emotional distress than their campers did. Both parents and children reported significant improvements in their own distress after camp. Teens reported improvements in distress but they were not statistically significant. Youth report higher levels of self-care skills than parents believe their children possess. Parents, Teens, and Children all reported significant improvements in the camper's self-care skills after camp. First time campers' and their parents' perspectives regarding self-care skills are consistent with veteran campers after attending camp. Self-reports post-camp reveals that campers and their parents see camp as a place where youth feel they are with others who really understand what it is like to live with diabetes. Respondents also report that camp is a place where youth are exposed to new technologies and where campers can try new self-care tasks.
Keyphrases
  • binding protein
  • young adults
  • type diabetes
  • cardiovascular disease
  • protein kinase
  • glycemic control
  • mental health
  • physical activity
  • emergency department
  • skeletal muscle
  • insulin resistance
  • metabolic syndrome