Author: Wang, Christine H.; Hilliard, Marisa E.; Carreon, Samantha A.; Jones, Jasmine; Rooney, KellyAnn; Barber, John R.; Tully, Carrie; Monaghan, Maureen; Streisand, Randi
Title: Predictors of mood, diabetesâ€specific and COVIDâ€19â€specific experiences among parents of early schoolâ€age children with type 1 diabetes during initial months of the COVIDâ€19 pandemic Cord-id: act6pcnq Document date: 2021_8_30
ID: act6pcnq
Snippet: OBJECTIVE: The current study explored preâ€pandemic sociodemographics, medical characteristics, social/family support, and mood symptoms, and current COVIDâ€19 experiences as predictors of mood, positive/negative diabetesâ€specific experiences, and COVIDâ€19â€specific distress among parents of children with type 1 diabetes during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic. We hypothesized that parents from marginalized backgrounds, youth with higher preâ€pandemic A1c and no CGM use, parents with lower preâ€
Document: OBJECTIVE: The current study explored preâ€pandemic sociodemographics, medical characteristics, social/family support, and mood symptoms, and current COVIDâ€19 experiences as predictors of mood, positive/negative diabetesâ€specific experiences, and COVIDâ€19â€specific distress among parents of children with type 1 diabetes during the COVIDâ€19 pandemic. We hypothesized that parents from marginalized backgrounds, youth with higher preâ€pandemic A1c and no CGM use, parents with lower preâ€pandemic social/family support and more preâ€pandemic mood/anxiety symptoms, and those with more negative COVIDâ€19 experiences would have more depressive symptoms, fewer positive and more negative diabetesâ€specific experiences, and more COVIDâ€19â€specific distress during the initial months of the pandemic. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Participants were parents of early schoolâ€age children with type 1 diabetes (n = 100; 65% nonâ€Hispanic, white, 92% mothers, 75% married; M (child age) = 6.74 ± 1.59 years) who had completed a behavioral intervention trial ≥6 months ago and were reâ€contacted in June/July 2020 to report on their COVIDâ€19 pandemic experiences and parent psychosocial outcomes. Preâ€pandemic parent mood/anxiety symptoms, family/social support, and children's medical characteristics (CGM use; M (A1C) = 8.17% ± 1.40%) were assessed M = 1.45 ± 0.59 years prior. RESULTS: More preâ€pandemic social support predicted fewer depressive symptoms, more positive diabetesâ€specific experiences, and less COVIDâ€19â€specific distress during the pandemic. More preâ€pandemic depressive symptoms predicted more depressive symptoms during the pandemic. More life disruptions due to the pandemic were associated with more negative diabetesâ€specific experiences and more COVIDâ€19â€specific distress. Parents of color had more negative diabetesâ€specific experiences. CONCLUSIONS: Social support may be particularly important to assess and address through intervention. Pediatric diabetes care providers should monitor parent experiences in relation to children's diabetes management. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02527525.
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