1型糖尿病
血糖性
糖尿病
医学
苦恼
连续血糖监测
健康心理学
2型糖尿病
内科学
纵向数据
临床心理学
研究设计
发展心理学
早晨
胰岛素
纵向研究
年轻人
心理学
血糖自我监测
心理信息
内分泌学
低血糖
结构方程建模
生活质量研究
心理困扰
作者
Jeffrey S. Gonzalez,Stefan Schneider,Claire Hoogendoorn,Lauren Nandoo,Elizabeth Pyatak
摘要
Abstract Background Despite extensive research on the role of self-efficacy in behavioral performance across various domains, its specific influence on self-management behaviors in type 1 diabetes (T1D) remains unclear. While studies find inconsistent evidence on whether self-efficacy actively drives future behaviors or is instead shaped by prior performance, research directly examining these temporal relationships in T1D is limited. Purpose This study aims to examine the within-person, bidirectional, temporal relationships among self-efficacy, diabetes distress, self-management behavior, and glycemic regulation in T1D using intensive longitudinal data. Methods The current analyses used data from the Function and Emotion in Everyday Life with Type 1 Diabetes study (N = 173). Participants wore a blinded continuous glucose monitor (CGM) for 14 days and completed 5-6 smartphone-based surveys daily. Data were analyzed using dynamic structural equation modeling. Results Diabetes self-efficacy, distress, and self-management were significantly related within-person. Morning self-efficacy predicted lower diabetes distress and better management, both of which improved CGM outcomes. Lagged analyses revealed that prior-day self-efficacy, distress, and self-management predicted next-morning self-efficacy, but prior-day glucose did not. Feedback from personal use of unblinded CGM did not influence these relationships. Conclusions Findings support self-efficacy as both an influence on future T1D self-management behavior change and an outcome of prior emotional states and self-management performance. Results suggest that diabetes self-efficacy predicts short-term glycemic regulation primarily through its associations with changes in diabetes distress and self-management.
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