Improvement in glycemic control following a diabetes education intervention is associated with change in diabetes distress but not change in depressive symptoms

Author Department

Medicine

Document Type

Article, Peer-reviewed

Publication Date

6-1-2012

Abstract

In diabetes patients, depression is correlated with diabetes-specific emotional distress, and observational studies have suggested that diabetes distress may have a greater impact on diabetes outcomes than depression itself. To examine the relative effects of change in depressive symptoms and change in diabetes distress on change in glycemic control, we conducted a diabetes self-management education intervention in 234 type 2 diabetes (T2DM) patients, and measured glycemic control (HbA1c), depressive symptoms (CES-D), and diabetes distress (PAID) at baseline and 6 months. In multiple linear regression, change in depressive symptoms was not associated with change in HbA1c (P=0.23). Change in diabetes distress was significantly associated with change in HbA1c (P<0.01), such that a 10-point decrease in diabetes distress (which corresponds to the average change in distress in this study population) was associated with a 0.25% reduction in HbA1c. Change in diabetes distress, and not change in depressive symptoms, was associated with both short- and long-term change in glycemic control for patients with poorly controlled T2DM.

Publication ISSN

0021-9258

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