1. Factors Associated With Academic Achievement in Children With Type 1 Diabetes
- Author
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Michelle A. Mengeling, Janet C. Engvall, Eva Tsalikian, Scott D. Lindgren, and Ann Marie McCarthy
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,Male ,Research design ,Gerontology ,Educational measurement ,Adolescent ,Cross-sectional study ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Academic achievement ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Learning ,Achievement test ,Age of Onset ,Sex Distribution ,Child ,Socioeconomic status ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Type 1 diabetes ,business.industry ,Achievement ,medicine.disease ,Hospitalization ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Hyperglycemia ,Predictive value of tests ,Educational Status ,Female ,Educational Measurement ,business ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
OBJECTIVE—To examine academic achievement in children with diabetes and to identify predictors of achievement. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—Participants were 244 children, ages 8–18 years, with type 1 diabetes. Measures included school-administered standardized achievement tests (Iowa Tests of Basic Skills and Iowa Tests of Educational Development [ITBS/ITED]), grade point averages (GPAs), school absences, behavioral assessment, age at disease onset, hospitalizations, and HbA1c. Statistical differences between subgroups of children were evaluated using t test and ANOVA, statistically controlling for socioeconomic status. Regression analyses were carried out to examine predictors of academic performance. RESULTS—Reading scores and GPA were lower for children with poor metabolic control than for children with average control. Children with hospitalizations for hyperglycemia had lower overall achievement scores than children with better metabolic control and fewer hospitalizations for hyperglycemia. The small group of children with tight metabolic control and hypoglycemic hospitalizations scored particularly low on the ITBS/ITED. Other variables had less clear relationships with academic achievement. Neither early onset of diabetes nor frequent school absence was associated with lower scores on the ITBS/ITED. Sex comparisons found that boys performed better than girls only in math. Socioeconomic status and parent ratings of behavior problems were significantly correlated with academic achievement, but medical variables added only slightly to predictive precision. CONCLUSIONS—For most children with diabetes, medical variables are not as strongly associated with academic achievement as are factors such as socioeconomic status and behavioral factors. Poor metabolic control and serious hypoglycemia, however, are a potential concern for a subset of these children.
- Published
- 2003
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