Sarkar Urmimala, Fisher Lawrence, Schillinger Dean
Division of General Internal Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA.
Diabetes Care. 2006 Apr;29(4):823-9. doi: 10.2337/diacare.29.04.06.dc05-1615.
Although prior research demonstrated that improving diabetes self-efficacy can improve self-management behavior, little is known about the applicability of this research across race/ethnicity and health literacy levels. We examined the relationship between diabetes self-efficacy and self-management behavior in an urban, diverse, low-income population with a high prevalence of limited health literacy.
We administered an oral questionnaire in Spanish and English to patients with type 2 diabetes at two primary care clinics at a public hospital. We measured self-efficacy, health literacy, and self-management behaviors using established instruments. We performed multivariate regressions to explore the associations between self-efficacy and self-management, adjusting for clinical and demographic factors. We tested for interactions between self-efficacy, race/ethnicity, and health literacy on self-management.
The study participants were ethnically diverse (18% Asian/Pacific Islander, 25% African American, 42% Latino/a, and 15% white), and 52% had limited health literacy (short version of the Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults score <23). Diabetes self-efficacy was associated with four of the five self-management domains (P < 0.01). After adjustment, with each 10% increase in self-efficacy score, patients were more likely to report optimal diet (0.14 day more per week), exercise (0.09 day more per week), self-monitoring of blood glucose (odds ratio 1.16), and foot care (1.22), but not medication adherence (1.10, P = 0.40). The associations between self-efficacy and self-management were consistent across race/ethnicity and health literacy levels.
Self-efficacy was associated with self-management behaviors in this vulnerable population, across both race/ethnicity and health literacy levels. However, the magnitude of the associations suggests that, among diverse populations, further study of the determinants of and barriers to self-management is warranted. Policy efforts should be focused on expanding the reach of self-management interventions to include ethnically diverse populations across the spectrum of health literacy.
尽管先前的研究表明提高糖尿病自我效能可以改善自我管理行为,但对于该研究在不同种族/族裔和健康素养水平中的适用性知之甚少。我们在一个城市中健康素养有限患病率高的多样化低收入人群中,研究了糖尿病自我效能与自我管理行为之间的关系。
我们在一家公立医院的两家初级保健诊所,用西班牙语和英语对2型糖尿病患者进行了口头问卷调查。我们使用既定工具测量自我效能、健康素养和自我管理行为。我们进行了多变量回归分析,以探讨自我效能与自我管理之间的关联,并对临床和人口统计学因素进行了调整。我们测试了自我效能、种族/族裔和健康素养在自我管理方面的相互作用。
研究参与者种族多样(18%为亚裔/太平洋岛民,25%为非裔美国人,42%为拉丁裔,15%为白人),52%的人健康素养有限(成人功能性健康素养测试简版得分<23)。糖尿病自我效能与五个自我管理领域中的四个相关(P<0.01)。调整后,自我效能得分每增加10%,患者更有可能报告最佳饮食(每周多0.14天)、运动(每周多0.09天)、血糖自我监测(优势比1.16)和足部护理(1.22),但药物依从性并非如此(1.10,P=0.40)。自我效能与自我管理之间的关联在不同种族/族裔和健康素养水平中是一致的。
在这个弱势群体中,无论种族/族裔和健康素养水平如何,自我效能都与自我管理行为相关。然而,关联的程度表明,在多样化人群中,有必要进一步研究自我管理的决定因素和障碍。政策努力应集中在扩大自我管理干预措施的覆盖范围,以纳入不同健康素养水平的不同种族人群。