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Clinical and Socio-demographic Determinants of Self-care Maintenance, Monitoring and Management in US Adults with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.

Michela LucianiEmanuela RossiPaola ReboraMichael A StawnychyDavide AusiliBarbara Riegel
Published in: Clinical nursing research (2020)
The aims of this study were to describe self-care in US T2DM patients and to identify clinical and sociodemographic determinants of self-care maintenance, monitoring, and management in US T2DM patients. A secondary analysis was performed using data from a cross-sectional study done to test the psychometric performance of the Self-Care of Diabetes Inventory in US English speaking adults with diabetes. In our sample (n = 207), self-care maintenance was adequately performed (median = 75), self-care monitoring was borderline (median = 67.6) and self-care management was poor (median = 55.6). Low income (p = .0019) and low self-care confidence (p < .0001) were associated with relatively lower self-care maintenance. Not taking insulin (p = .0153) and low self-care confidence (p < .0001) were associated with relatively low self-care monitoring. Low self-care confidence (p < .0001) was associated with low self-care management. Self-care confidence is a strong determinant of self-care. Interventions designed to improve self-care confidence are urgently needed.
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