1,233 results on '"Berg, Cynthia A."'
Search Results
2. Global stress and daily general and type 1 diabetes stressors and links to daily affect and diabetes outcomes during emerging adulthood
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Berg, Cynthia A., Tracy, Eunjin Lee, Boggess, Silas B., Butner, Jonathan E., Loyola, Maria D. Ramirez, and Wiebe, Deborah J.
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- 2024
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3. Executive Functioning, Daily Self-Regulation, and Diabetes Management while Transitioning into Emerging Adulthood.
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Berg, Cynthia, Munion, Ascher, Loyola, Maria, Mello, Daniel, Butner, Jonathan, Suchy, Yana, Marino, Jessica, and Wiebe, Deborah
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Daily diary ,Diabetes self-management ,Emerging adulthood ,Executive functioning ,Self-regulation ,Type 1 diabetes ,Humans ,Female ,Adult ,Male ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Executive Function ,Self Report ,Self-Control - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Executive functioning (EF) predicts better Type 1 diabetes (T1D) management in the high-risk years after high school, but the daily self-regulation processes involved are unclear. PURPOSE: To examine whether EF is associated with daily self-regulation that minimizes ones exposure or buffers adverse reactions to daily diabetes problems, and to determine whether these patterns become stronger during the transition out of high school. METHODS: A measurement burst design with convenience sampling was used. Seniors in high school with T1D (N = 207; 66% female) completed self-report (i.e., Behavioral Rating Inventory of Executive Functioning) and performance measures of EF (i.e., Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System). A 14-day daily diary assessing self-regulation failures, diabetes problems, affect, and indicators of diabetes management was completed at baseline and 1 year later. RESULTS: Correlations and multilevel modeling were conducted. Lower self-reported EF problems were associated with lower average levels of daily self-regulation failures, and these variables were associated with fewer daily diabetes problems. In contrast, better EF performance was unrelated to average daily self-regulation failures, and was unexpectedly associated with more frequent diabetes problems in year 2. Equally across years, on days participants reported lower than their average levels of daily self-regulation failures, they had fewer diabetes problems, regardless of EF. On days with lower than average diabetes problems, participants reported better diabetes management indicators. EF generally did not buffer daily associations in either year. CONCLUSIONS: Regardless of EF, promoting daily self-regulation may prevent diabetes problems and promote T1D management in daily life at this high-risk transitional time.
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- 2023
4. A Comparison of Models for Inferring Longitudinal Reciprocal Relationships between Constructs: A Case Example with Internalizing and Externalizing Problems
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Shi, Qinxin, Butner, Jonathan E., Kilshaw, Robyn, Munion, Ascher, Deboeck, Pascal, Oh, Yoonkyung, and Berg, Cynthia A.
- Abstract
Developmental researchers commonly utilize longitudinal data to decompose reciprocal and dynamic associations between repeatedly measured constructs to better understand the temporal precedence between constructs. Although the cross-lagged panel model (CLPM) is commonly used in developmental research, it has been criticized for its potential to produce biased estimates due to the fact of ignoring the trait-like, time-invariant nature of stability in constructs across people and aggregating the between and within-person effects together as a single estimate. Recently, a growing set of alternatives have emerged, but the estimates across CLPM and alternatives have rarely been compared in developmental research. The primary purpose of this article is to (a) provide a three-component framework to help developmental researchers to select and specify the most appropriate model, and (b) illustrate how models differ in estimates with an empirical example investigating the reciprocal associations between internalizing and externalizing problems in school-aged children. Methods: We specified CLPM, Random-Intercept Cross-lagged Panel Model (RI-CLPM), Latent Curve Model with Structured Residuals (LCM-SR), Latent Change Score (LCS), and a Random-Mean LCS using four waves of data from ECLS-K: 2011 (N = 8779). Results: The CLPM provided the most evidence of significant cross-lagged paths but the poorest fit to the data compared to other models. Alternative models had excellent fit and found either only negative temporal precedence from internalizing to externalizing problems or simply no evidence of prospective within-person relations between internalizing and externalizing problems.
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- 2023
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5. Collaborative Problem Solving, Crises, and Well-Being
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Schindler, Ines, Berg, Cynthia A., Pareto, Adriano, Section editor, and Maggino, Filomena, editor
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- 2023
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6. Executive Cognitive Functions and Behavioral Control Differentially Predict HbA1c in Type 1 Diabetes across Emerging Adulthood
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Suchy, Yana, Butner, Jonathan, Wiebe, Deborah J, Campbell, MaryJane, Turner, Sara L, and Berg, Cynthia A
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Biological Psychology ,Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Diabetes ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Chronic Disease ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Executive Function ,Female ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Humans ,Intelligence ,Male ,Patient Compliance ,Psychomotor Performance ,Executive functioning ,Cognition ,Chronic illness ,Adolescence ,Adherence ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesTo examine the contributions of two aspects of executive functioning (executive cognitive functions and behavioral control) to changes in diabetes management across emerging adulthood.MethodsTwo hundred and forty-seven high school seniors with type 1 diabetes were assessed at baseline and followed up for 3 years. The baseline assessment battery included performance-based measures of executive cognitive functions, behavioral control, IQ estimate (IQ-est), and psychomotor speed; self-report of adherence to diabetes regimen; and glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) assay kits as a reflection of glycemic control.ResultsLinear and quadratic growth curve models were used to simultaneously examine baseline performance on four cognitive variables (executive cognitive functions, behavioral control, IQ, and psychomotor speed) as predictors of indices of diabetes management (HbA1c and adherence) across four time points. Additionally, general linear regressions examined relative contributions of each cognitive variable at individual time points. The results showed that higher behavioral control at baseline was related to lower (better) HbA1c levels across all four time points. In contrast, executive cognitive functions at baseline were related to HbA1c trajectories, accounting for increasingly more HbA1c variance over time with increasing transition to independence. IQ-est was not related to HbA1c levels or changes over time, but accounted instead for HbA1c variance at baseline (while teens were still living at home), above and beyond all other variables. Cognition was unrelated to adherence.ConclusionsDifferent aspects of cognition play a different role in diabetes management at different time points during emerging adulthood years.
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- 2020
7. Diabetes stress contagion among romantic partners: a daily diary investigation
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Helgeson, Vicki S., Allen, Nancy A., Tracy, Eunjin L., Butner, Jonathan, and Berg, Cynthia A.
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Type 1 diabetes -- Psychological aspects ,Diabetics -- Social aspects ,Stress (Psychology) -- Risk factors -- Health aspects ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The stress of diabetes management not only affects persons with type 1 diabetes (PWD) but also their social network. We examined the extent to which romantic partners of PWD (n = 199) identified their most significant daily stressor as diabetes-related (i.e., partner diabetes stress) using a 14-day daily diary design. Utilizing a communal coping framework, we examined appraisal and communication as predictors of partner diabetes stress and examined links of partner diabetes stress to supportive/unsupportive behavior and mood by assessing each construct daily. We also examined whether a survey measure of partner anxious attachment moderated these links. Results showed that viewing diabetes as a shared problem and greater diabetes communication were associated with greater partner diabetes stress. Partner diabetes stress was linked to partner provision of greater supportive and unsupportive behavior-especially so for anxiously attached partners. Importantly, partner diabetes stress was not linked to mood for PWDs or partners., Author(s): Vicki S. Helgeson [sup.1] , Nancy A. Allen [sup.2] , Eunjin L. Tracy [sup.3] , Jonathan Butner [sup.2] , Cynthia A. Berg [sup.2] Author Affiliations: (1) grid.147455.6, 0000 0001 [...]
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- 2022
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8. Diabetes support from romantic partners during early emerging adulthood
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Kent de Grey, Robert G., Berg, Cynthia A., Campbell, MaryJane S., Munion, A. K., Luyckx, Koen, Raymaekers, Koen, Litchman, Michelle L., and Wiebe, Deborah J.
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- 2022
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9. Examining Share plus A Continuous Glucose Monitoring plus Data Sharing Intervention in Older Adults and Their Care Partners: Protocol for a Pilot Study (Preprint)
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Allen, Nancy A., primary, Berg, Cynthia A., additional, Iacob, Eli, additional, Gonzales, Bruno, additional, Butner, Jonathan E., additional, and Litchman, Michelle L., additional
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- 2024
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10. Relationship satisfaction moderates links between poor sleep quality and psychological distress among couples coping with type 1 diabetes
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Tracy, Eunjin Lee, Berg, Cynthia A., Butner, Jonathan E., de Grey, Robert G. Kent, Allen, Nancy A., Porter, Margot E., and Helgeson, Vicki S.
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- 2022
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11. AIM2ACT: Randomized controlled trial protocol for a mobile health intervention for early adolescents with asthma
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Fedele, David A., Thomas, J. Graham, McQuaid, Elizabeth L., Gurka, Matthew, Berg, Cynthia A., and Prabhakaran, Sreekala
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- 2022
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12. Keeping Parents Connected in Early Emerging Adulthood: Diabetes-Related Disclosure and Solicitation
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Kelly, Caitlin S, Berg, Cynthia A, Lansing, Amy H, Turner, Sara L, Munion, Ascher K, Tracy, Eunjin L, and Wiebe, Deborah J
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Pediatric ,Diabetes ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Behavior ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Disclosure ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Parent-Child Relations ,Parents ,Self Care ,emerging adulthood ,Type 1 diabetes ,parent-child contact ,disclosure ,diabetes management ,Family Studies ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
Emerging adults with Type 1 diabetes benefit when parents remain knowledgeable of their self-management. Yet how early emerging adults remain connected with parents while they experience normative declines in involvement and move out of the parental home is unclear. The present study examined how disclosure to, and solicitation from, parents may (a) be a way that emerging adults and parents remain connected, (b) occur with different methods of contact (i.e., face-to-face; non-face-to-face), and (c) associate with diabetes management differently for those living in versus outside of the parental home. Early emerging adults with Type 1 diabetes (N = 202; Mage = 18.81 years; 66% female) completed measures of their methods of contact with parents; diabetes-related disclosure to, and solicitation from, parents; and diabetes management as part of a 14-day daily diary. General linear models found that face-to-face contact was associated with greater disclosure to parents, for both those living in and out of the parental home. Individuals who lived outside the parental home used more non-face-to-face contact (e.g., texting) than those in the parental home. Multilevel models revealed that higher disclosure to mothers on a daily basis (within-persons) and to mothers and fathers overall (between-persons) was associated with better diabetes management similarly for those living in versus out of the parental home. Results suggest that face-to-face contact may be most effective for keeping parents "in the know" about diabetes management. Moreover, disclosure and solicitation continue to support diabetes management even as individuals move out of the parental home. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2019
13. Structural model of patient-centered communication and diabetes management in early emerging adults at the transfer to adult care
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Baker, Ashley C, Wiebe, Deborah J, Kelly, Caitlin S, Munion, Ascher, Butner, Jonathan E, Swinyard, Michael T, Murray, Mary, and Berg, Cynthia A
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Social and Personality Psychology ,Psychology ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Autoimmune Disease ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Diabetes ,Pediatric ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Communication ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Disease Management ,Female ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Humans ,Male ,Models ,Structural ,Mother-Child Relations ,Patient-Centered Care ,Self Care ,Self Efficacy ,Transition to Adult Care ,Treatment Adherence and Compliance ,Young Adult ,Patient-centered communication ,Type 1 diabetes ,Transition to adult care ,Early emerging adulthood ,Self-efficacy ,Diabetes management ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Clinical Psychology ,Public health ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
Early emerging adulthood (ages 18-25) is a time of risk for type 1 diabetes (T1D) when relationships with parents and providers are changing. We examined whether individuals' high-quality relationships with mothers are associated with greater perceptions of patient-centered communication (PCC) with their doctor and whether PCC is associated with better adherence and glycemic control through diabetes-related self-efficacy. Additionally, we tested whether associations of PCC with self-efficacy and diabetes outcomes are stronger among those who had transferred to adult care. One-year post-high school, 217 individuals with T1D (60% women, 53% in adult care) reported perceptions of maternal relationship quality, PCC, self-efficacy, and adherence. Glycemic control was measured via HbA1c assay kits. Structural equation modeling indicated good model fit and revealed indirect paths linking higher maternal relationship quality to better adherence through higher PCC, and higher PCC to better HbA1c through adherence. Transfer status moderated the link between PCC and self-efficacy, suggesting PCC may be especially important when emerging adults transfer to adult care.
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- 2019
14. Parental Self-Control as a Moderator of the Association Between Family Conflict and Type 1 Diabetes Management
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Campbell, MaryJane S, Berg, Cynthia A, and Wiebe, Deborah J
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Prevention ,Autoimmune Disease ,Diabetes ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Behavior ,Adult ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Family Conflict ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Parent-Child Relations ,Parents ,Patient Compliance ,Self-Control ,adolescents ,diabetes ,family conflict ,parenting ,self-control ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine whether parental self-control (i.e., parents' ability to regulate their emotions, cognitions, and behaviors) moderates the detrimental association between type 1 diabetes (T1D)-specific family conflict and adherence and HbA1c, such that conflict is most detrimental when parental self-control is low.MethodsOne hundred and forty-nine adolescents diagnosed with T1D (Mage = 14.09; 53% female) reported on their T1D-specific conflict with their mothers and fathers and their adherence to the T1D regimen at two time points (6 months apart). Mothers and fathers reported on their self-control. Glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) was obtained from the medical record at both time points.ResultsHigher adolescent-reported conflict with father was associated concurrently with higher HbA1c and lower adherence only for fathers with low self-control (ps < .05). Higher adolescent-reported conflict with mother was also associated concurrently with lower adherence only for mothers with lower self-control (p < .05); no significant moderation was found for mothers' self-control in predicting HbA1c. Longitudinal analyses indicated family conflict with mother predicted changes in adherence and HbA1c, but there were no significant moderating effects of either mother or father self-control.ConclusionsLower parental self-control may prevent parents from handling diabetes-related family conflict in a productive manner. We discuss the implications of parental self-control as an intervention target for health care professionals working with adolescents with T1D and their families.
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- 2019
15. Parental Involvement and Executive Function in Emerging Adults with Type 1 Diabetes.
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Berg, Cynthia A, Wiebe, Deborah J, Lee Tracy, Eunjin, Kelly, Caitlin S, Mello, Daniel, Turner, Sara L, Butner, Jonathan E, Munion, Ascher K, Mansfield, Jessica H, White, Perrin C, Murray, Mary, and Suchy, Yana
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Prevention ,Diabetes ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Executive Function ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Male ,Parenting ,Parents ,Patient Compliance ,Young Adult ,diabetes ,family functioning ,longitudinal research ,neuropsychology ,parents ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine (a) changes in parental involvement across early emerging adulthood, (b) whether yearly fluctuations in parental involvement were associated with adherence and glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) over time, and (c) whether higher involvement was more beneficial for those with poorer executive function (EF).MethodsA total of 228 high school seniors (M age = 17.76) with type 1 diabetes reported on mothers' and fathers' acceptance, knowledge of diabetes activities, disclosure to mothers and fathers regarding diabetes, and adherence at four yearly time points. At baseline, participants completed performance-based measures of EF. HbA1c was collected from assay kits.ResultsGrowth curve models revealed significant declines in disclosure to fathers and mothers' and fathers' knowledge of diabetes activities; no changes were found in mothers' or fathers' acceptance nor disclosure to mothers. Multilevel models indicated significant between-person effects for nearly all aspects of parental involvement with more acceptance, knowledge, and disclosure associated with better HbA1c and adherence. Within-person effects for disclosure to fathers, and mothers' and fathers' knowledge indicated that in years when emerging adults perceived higher amounts of these types of involvement (compared with their own average), HbA1c was lower. Within-person effects were found for acceptance to mothers, disclosure to mothers and fathers, and mothers' diabetes knowledge for adherence. Disclosure to fathers and mothers' knowledge of diabetes activities were especially beneficial for HbA1c for those with poorer EF performance.ConclusionsParental involvement in diabetes management remains important during the high-risk time of emerging adulthood, especially for those with poorer EF.
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- 2019
16. Health-risk behaviors and type 1 diabetes outcomes in the transition from late adolescence to early emerging adulthood
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Tracy, Eunjin Lee, Berg, Cynthia A, Baker, Ashley C, Mello, Daniel, Litchman, Michelle L, and Wiebe, Deborah J
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Psychology ,Clinical and Health Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Pediatric ,Autoimmune Disease ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Substance Misuse ,Diabetes ,Obesity ,Tobacco ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Good Health and Well Being ,adolescents ,diabetes ,emerging adults ,glycemic control ,health-risk behaviors ,Public Health and Health Services ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
This study examined within- and between-person associations between health-risk behaviors (smoking, drinking, insulin withholding) and type 1 diabetes (T1D) outcomes (adherence and HbA1c) during the high-risk transition from late adolescence to early emerging adulthood utilizing a 2-year longitudinal study. Beginning in the senior year of high school, participants (n = 197) with T1D completed measures of health-risk behaviors, adherence, and HbA1c annually at three time points. Health-risk behaviors were associated with poorer diabetes outcomes during the transition from late adolescence to early emerging adulthood. These results highlight the importance of monitoring health-risk behaviors regularly and intervening to reduce health-risk behaviors during this important developmental transition.
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- 2019
17. Perceived Peer Support and Diabetes Management From Adolescence Into Early Emerging Adulthood
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Pihlaskari, Andrea K, Wiebe, Deborah J, Troxel, Natalie R, Stewart, Sunita M, and Berg, Cynthia A
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Diabetes ,Pediatric ,Prevention ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Blood Glucose ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Female ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Humans ,Insulin ,Male ,Peer Group ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Young Adult ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesThe objective of the study was to examine longitudinal associations of perceived diabetes-specific peer support with adherence and glycemic control among late adolescents with type 1 diabetes as they transition out of high school and into early emerging adulthood.MethodAs part of a larger study, 211 high school seniors with type 1 diabetes completed confidential online surveys and were reassessed 1 year later. Perceived diabetes-specific peer support and adherence were assessed in each survey. Glycemic control was measured with HbA1c assay kits.ResultsPerceived diabetes-specific peer support in high school predicted better adherence across the subsequent year while controlling for initial levels of adherence. Perceived peer support during early emerging adulthood was also associated with better adherence across time, after controlling for initial levels of both adherence and peer support.ConclusionsPerceived diabetes-specific peer support may be a protective factor as late adolescents with type 1 diabetes transition out of high school. Building strong peer support during the transition into early emerging adulthood may facilitate better diabetes management during this high-risk time of development. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2018
18. Executive Function Predicting Longitudinal Change in Type 1 Diabetes Management During the Transition to Emerging Adulthood.
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Berg, Cynthia A, Wiebe, Deborah J, Suchy, Yana, Turner, Sara L, Butner, Jonathan, Munion, Ascher, Lansing, Amy Hughes, White, Perrin C, and Murray, Mary
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Humans ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Blood Glucose ,Prognosis ,Longitudinal Studies ,Intelligence ,Age Factors ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Patient Care Planning ,Female ,Male ,Young Adult ,Executive Function ,Self Report ,Transition to Adult Care ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Diabetes ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Endocrinology & Metabolism - Abstract
OBJECTIVE:The objective of this study was to examine 1) whether teens' glycemic control and adherence to type 1 diabetes treatment regimen worsen during the transition from late adolescence to emerging adulthood, and 2) whether teens' executive function (EF), as measured by performance and self-reported problems with EF, is predictive of these changes (after controlling for general intelligence). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS:High school seniors with type 1 diabetes (N = 236; mean age 17.74 years) were assessed at three yearly time points. At baseline, during the senior year of high school, participants completed a self-report measure of problems with EF and performance-based measures of EF and general intelligence (IQ). Glycemic control was determined on the basis of results collected from HbA1c assay kits, and teens reported their adherence at all three time points. RESULTS:HbA1c increased significantly across the three time points and adherence declined. EF performance was not associated with adherence or HbA1c at baseline, nor with changes in adherence over time. However, better EF performance predicted slower increases in HbA1c over time (i.e., slope) while controlling for IQ. Teens' self-reported problems with EF were associated with worse glycemic control and poorer adherence at baseline (i.e., intercept), but they did not predict changes in either HbA1c or adherence over time (i.e., slope). CONCLUSIONS:Abilities involved in performance on EF tests may be one resource for maintaining better glycemic control during the transition to emerging adulthood. Assessment of such EF abilities may allow for the identification of individuals who are most at risk for deterioration of glycemic control during this transition.
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- 2018
19. Visualizing holistic person-specific dynamic systems: a case example with self-efficacy and self-care behavior in emerging adults with type 1 diabetes.
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Shi, Qinxin, Yu, Dian, Butner, Jonathan E., Berg, Cynthia A., Campbell, MaryJane Simms, and Wiebe, Deborah J.
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Common ways to test associations between two repeatedly measured constructs have two primary limitations. Studies often report the average effects and ignore the heterogeneity. Independently interpreted autoregression and cross-lagged coefficients (i.e. local effects) may not match the holistic dynamic patterns (i.e. considering all coefficients simultaneously). Our paper aims to address the limitations by introducing vector plots to visualize holistic person-specific dynamic patterns. We utilized a case example of 14-day daily diary data of diabetes self-efficacy and self-care from 200 emerging adults with type 1 diabetes. A dynamic structural equation model was used to generate person-specific coefficients. Vector plots and eigenvalues were generated to visualize person-specific holistic patterns. We found heterogeneity in both local and holistic dynamic patterns. Most participants (N = 178) had mismatching local and holistic patterns. Our study provided important evidence that failing to capture person-specific holistic dynamic patterns might result in incomplete interpretations of dynamic associations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Depressive Symptoms and Diabetes Management From Late Adolescence to Emerging Adulthood
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Baucom, Katherine JW, Turner, Sara L, Tracy, Eunjin L, Berg, Cynthia A, and Wiebe, Deborah J
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Depression ,Diabetes ,Autoimmune Disease ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Mental Health ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Female ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Young Adult ,diabetes ,depression ,adherence ,glycemic control ,adolescents ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine changes in depressive symptoms as well as between- and within-person associations between depressive symptoms and Type 1 diabetes (T1D) management across the transition from late adolescence to emerging adulthood.MethodBeginning in the senior year of high school, 197 late adolescents with T1D (Mage = 17.77) reported on their student status and living situation, and completed self-report measures of depressive symptoms and adherence to the diabetes regimen, annually at 3 time points. Glycemic control was gathered from hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) assay kits at the same time points.ResultsResults of multilevel models demonstrated high depressive symptoms at baseline, with significant increases in depressive symptoms across time when participants were not living in their parental home, but no change when living with parents. Participants with higher mean levels of depressive symptoms relative to peers (between-person association) had poorer adherence and glycemic control (i.e., higher HbA1c) on average. Within-person fluctuations in depressive symptoms were significantly associated with adherence: greater increases in depressive symptoms (relative to adolescents' own average) were associated with greater deteriorations in adherence. There was not a significant within-person effect of depressive symptoms on glycemic control.ConclusionsThe transition from late adolescence to emerging adulthood is particularly challenging for those with T1D. The findings that individuals with greater depressive symptoms have poorer adherence and glycemic control relative to those with lower depressive symptoms, and that increases in depressive symptoms are associated with declines in adherence, highlight the importance of screening and monitoring depressive symptoms during this life transition. (PsycINFO Database Record
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- 2018
21. Relationships and the development of transition readiness skills into early emerging adulthood for individuals with type 1 diabetes
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Kelly, Caitlin S, Berg, Cynthia A, Ramsey, Meagan A, Baker, Ashley C, Donaldson, David L, Swinyard, Michael T, Lindsay, Rob, Murray, Mary, and Wiebe, Deborah J
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Psychology ,Clinical and Health Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Diabetes ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Good Health and Well Being ,Public Health and Health Services ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
The study examined how 'transition readiness' skills develop from relationship processes with parents, friends, and healthcare providers. During their senior year of high school and one year later, participants (N = 217) with type 1 diabetes completed measures of transition readiness skills (Self-Management; Self-Advocacy), adherence, HbA1c, and relationships with providers (patient-centered communication), parents (monitoring/knowledge), and friends (knowledge/helpfulness) surrounding diabetes. Self-Management skills increased across time. Higher friend knowledge/helpfulness during emerging adulthood was associated with increased Self-Management skills. Adherence improved when relationships with providers and friends matched transition readiness skills, indicating that these relationships may facilitate transition skills in early emerging adulthood.
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- 2018
22. Individual Differences and Day-to-Day Fluctuations in Goal Planning and Type 1 Diabetes Management
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Wiebe, Deborah J, Baker, Ashley C, Suchy, Yana, Stump, Tammy K, and Berg, Cynthia A
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Diabetes ,Pediatric ,Autoimmune Disease ,Clinical Research ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Female ,Goals ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,diabetes ,adherence ,goal striving ,executive function ,daily diary ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine whether individual differences and day-to-day fluctuations in diabetes goal planning are associated with Type 1 diabetes (T1D) management during late adolescence, and whether lapses in daily diabetes goal planning are more disruptive to diabetes management among those with poorer executive functioning (EF).MethodLate adolescents with T1D (N = 236, Mage = 17.77 years) completed survey measures assessing individual differences in levels of diabetes goal planning and adherence, as well as survey and performance-based measures of EF; glycemic control was assessed through glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) assays. Participants then completed a 2-week daily diary, rating items measuring daily diabetes goal planning, goal effort, and adherence, and recording blood-glucose tests from their glucometer at the end of each day.ResultsAnalyses of survey measures indicated that higher individual differences in diabetes goal planning were associated with better adherence and glycemic control. Analyses of daily data using hierarchical linear modeling indicated that adolescents displayed higher daily adherence and lower blood-glucose levels on days when they had higher-than-their-average levels of daily goal planning and daily goal effort. EF moderated the association between daily goal planning and daily adherence, indicating that lapses in daily goal planning were more disruptive for adolescents with poorer EF.ConclusionBoth individual differences and day-to-day fluctuations in diabetes goal planning are associated with diabetes management, highlighting the challenges of managing T1D in daily life. Youth in late adolescence with poorer EF may especially benefit from planning to attain diabetes goals on a daily basis. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2018
23. Coordination of Self- and Parental-Regulation Surrounding Type I Diabetes Management in Late Adolescence
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Butner, Jonathan E, Berg, Cynthia A, Munion, AK, Turner, Sara L, Hughes-Lansing, Amy, Winnick, Joel B, and Wiebe, Deborah J
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Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Diabetes ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Behavior ,Affect ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Disclosure ,Fathers ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Mothers ,Parenting ,Patient Compliance ,Self-Control ,Self-Management ,Type 1 diabetes ,Self-regulation ,Parental-regulation ,Adherence ,Dynamical systems ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health - Abstract
BackgroundType 1 diabetes management involves self- and social-regulation, with past research examining components through individual differences unable to capture daily processes.PurposeDynamical systems modeling was used to examine the coordinative structure of self- and social-regulation (operationalized as parental-regulation) related to daily diabetes management during late adolescence.MethodsTwo hundred and thirty-six late adolescents with type 1 diabetes (M age = 17.77 years, SD = .39) completed a 14-day diary reporting aspects of self- (e.g., adherence behaviors, cognitive self-regulation failures, and positive and negative affect) and parental-regulation (disclosure to parents, knowledge parents have, and help parents provide).ResultsSelf-regulation functioned as one coordinative structure that was separate from parental-regulation, where mothers and fathers were coordinated separately from each other. Mothers' perceived helpfulness served as a driver of returning adolescents back to homeostasis.ConclusionsThe results illustrate a dynamic process whereby numerous facets of self- and social-regulation are coordinated in order to return diabetes management to a stable state.
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- 2018
24. Attention Problems as a Predictor of Type 1 Diabetes Adherence and Metabolic Control Across Adolescence.
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Turner, Sara L, Berg, Cynthia A, Butner, Jonathan E, and Wiebe, Deborah J
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Diabetes ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Behavior ,Adult ,Attention ,Biomarkers ,Child ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Female ,Glycated Hemoglobin A ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Medication Adherence ,Parenting ,Psychology ,Adolescent ,adolescents ,attention problems ,type 1 diabetes ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveManagement of type 1 diabetes is a difficult self-regulatory process requiring continued attention to complex regimen tasks. The purpose of this study was to examine whether youths' attention problems were associated with poorer adherence and HbA1c across time, and whether higher parental involvement reduced these associations.MethodsAdolescents with type 1 diabetes (N = 199, M age = 12.43 years, SD = 1.50) and their mothers rated youths' attention problems and adherence at three time points. Adolescents rated parents' diabetes-specific monitoring and behavioral involvement. HbA1c was collected from medical records.ResultsAdolescents' (but not mothers') greater reports of attention problems compared with their average related to lower adherence across time. Adolescents' (but not mothers') reports of greater attention problems compared with their average related to lower adherence across time.ConclusionsYouth attention problems may help us understand poor adherence, and interventions to promote parental involvement may buffer this risk.
- Published
- 2018
25. Developmental model of parent-child coordination for self-regulation across childhood and into emerging adulthood: Type 1 diabetes management as an example
- Author
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Berg, Cynthia A, Butner, Jonathan, Wiebe, Deborah J, Lansing, Amy Hughes, Osborn, Peter, King, Pamela S, Palmer, Debra L, and Butler, Jorie M
- Subjects
Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Diabetes ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Self-regulation ,Parent-child relationships ,Coordination ,Diabetes management ,Adolescence ,adolescence ,coordination ,diabetes management ,parent-child relationships ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
Developing individuals and their families benefit from a warm and supportive relationship that fosters the development of good self-regulatory skills in the child needed for a host of positive developmental outcomes. Children and parents face special challenges to self-regulation when faced with a child's chronic illness. A developmental model is presented that traces how positive parental involvement is coordinated with a child's self-regulation skills (regulation of cognition, emotion, and behavior) that are essential for positive health management. This involves different temporal patterns of coordination of child and parent (and other close relationships) that lead to accumulating regulatory developments that afford benefits for managing illness. This process begins early in infancy through attachment and develops into childhood and adolescence to involve the coordination of parental monitoring and child disclosure that serves as a training ground for the expansion of social relationships beyond the family during emerging adulthood. The specific case of families dealing with type 1 diabetes is used to illustrate the transactional and dynamic nature of parent-child coordination across development. We conclude that a developmental model of parent-child coordination holds promise for understanding positive health outcomes and offers new methodological and statistical tools for the examination of development of both child and parent.
- Published
- 2017
26. Goal change and goal achievement for emerging adults across the pilot FAMS-T1D intervention for type 1 diabetes
- Author
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Berg, Cynthia A., primary, Mansfield, Jessica H., additional, Boggess, Silas B., additional, Martin, Julia V., additional, Creer, Benjamin, additional, Peck, Torri K., additional, Wiebe, Deborah J., additional, Butner, Jonathan E., additional, and Mayberry, Lindsay S., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Emotional expression in conversations about advance care planning among older adult home health patients and their caregivers
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Tay, Djin L., Ellington, Lee, Towsley, Gail L., Supiano, Katherine, and Berg, Cynthia A.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Diabetes-specific friend support in emerging adults with type 1 diabetes: Does satisfaction with support matter?
- Author
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Raymaekers, Koen, Helgeson, Vicki S., Prikken, Sofie, Vanhalst, Janne, Moons, Philip, Goossens, Eva, and Berg, Cynthia A.
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Diabetes therapy -- Management -- Social aspects ,Type 1 diabetes -- Care and treatment -- Social aspects ,Adolescent medicine -- Research ,Pediatric research ,Company business management ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Youth with type 1 diabetes (T1D) must adhere to a complex treatment regimen to prevent health complications. Friends may provide diabetes-specific support to help youth manage diabetes, but evidence on whether youth benefit from diabetes-specific friend support is inconclusive. The present study first investigated whether satisfaction with friend support was linked to psychological distress and diabetes management. Second, it was investigated whether self-esteem mediated these relations. To this end, 324 Dutch-speaking emerging adults (17-28 years) with T1D completed questionnaires on diabetes-specific friend support, self-esteem, diabetes-specific distress, depressive symptoms, and self-care. HbA1c values were obtained from patients' physicians. Receiving diabetes-specific support from friends was associated with more diabetes-specific distress, but not for youth who were satisfied with the received support. Diabetes-specific friend support was not associated with other outcomes. Self-esteem did not mediate these relations. These results suggest that associations between diabetes-specific friend support and diabetes management are limited and that support satisfaction should be taken into consideration when examining the role of friend support for youth with T1D., Author(s): Koen Raymaekers [sup.1] [sup.2] , Vicki S. Helgeson [sup.3] , Sofie Prikken [sup.1] [sup.2] , Janne Vanhalst [sup.4] , Philip Moons [sup.1] [sup.5] [sup.6] , Eva Goossens [sup.1] [sup.2] [...]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
29. Neighborhood disorder and glycemic control in late adolescents with Type 1 diabetes
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Queen, Tara L, Baucom, Katherine JW, Baker, Ashley C, Mello, Daniel, Berg, Cynthia A, and Wiebe, Deborah J
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Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Diabetes ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Prevention ,Behavioral and Social Science ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Quality Education ,Adolescent ,Blood Glucose ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Environment Design ,Exercise ,Female ,Glycated Hemoglobin A ,Humans ,Male ,Recreation ,Residence Characteristics ,Social Class ,Neighborhood disorder ,Adolescents ,Type 1 diabetes ,Subjective social status ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Economics ,Studies in Human Society ,Health sciences ,Human society - Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate the contribution of neighborhood characteristics to treatment adherence and glycemic control in late adolescents with Type 1 diabetes.Research design and methodsAs part of a larger study, 220 late adolescents with Type 1 diabetes (aged 17.8 ± 0.4 years, 59.6% female, diabetes duration 7.3 ± 3.9 years) were recruited from outpatient pediatric clinics during their senior year of high school. Adolescents completed self-report measures of adherence behaviors and subjective social status, and their HbA1c values were collected during a lab assessment. Their mothers reported on their own educational achievement. These data were linked with neighborhood characteristics obtained from 2010 American Community Survey data using participants' home addresses. Based on previous work (Dulin-Keita et al., 2012), a neighborhood disorder composite score was computed from Census-tract-level variables, including percent of the population achieving less than a high school education, under 18 who lived in poverty, unemployed, receiving public assistance, and percent of households that were vacant.Results- Adolescents with Type 1 diabetes who lived in more disordered neighborhoods were at higher risk for poorer glycemic control (p
- Published
- 2017
30. Mother, Father, and Adolescent Self-Control and Adherence in Adolescents With Type 1 Diabetes
- Author
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Lansing, Amy Hughes, Crochiere, Rebecca, Cueto, Carrie, Wiebe, Deborah J, and Berg, Cynthia A
- Subjects
Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Diabetes ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Autoimmune Disease ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Family Relations ,Fathers ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Mothers ,Patient Compliance ,Self-Control ,self-control ,adolescence ,family system ,chronic illness ,adherence ,Family Studies ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
This study explored whether shared self-control across a family system, including adolescent, mother, and father self-control, as well as the interaction of mother and father self-control, was associated with ease of completing adherence tasks and the completion of adherence behaviors related to the Type 1 diabetes (T1D) regimen. One hundred thirty-seven adolescents (M = 13.48 years), mothers, and fathers completed a self-report measure of self-control, while adolescents also self-reported on ease of completing adherence tasks and the frequency with which they completed adherence tasks. Higher adolescent, mother, father, and the interaction of mother and father self-control were each associated with greater adolescent perceptions of ease of completing adherence tasks. Also, greater adolescent perception of ease of adherence mediated the association of higher adolescent, father, and the interaction of mother and father self-control on more frequent adherence behaviors. The results are consistent with the idea that family members may share the load of self-control within the family system. The results point to the importance of assessing and intervening within the entire family system to support improved quality of life and better adherence to the medical regimen in adolescents with Type 1 diabetes. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2017
31. Metabolic Control and Academic Achievement Over Time Among Adolescents With Type 1 Diabetes
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Winnick, Joel B, Berg, Cynthia A, Wiebe, Deborah J, Schaefer, Barbara A, Lei, Pui-Wa, and Butner, Jonathan E
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Social and Personality Psychology ,Psychology ,Diabetes ,Pediatric ,Prevention ,Obesity ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Academic Success ,Adolescent ,Child ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Female ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Humans ,Male ,academic performance ,adolescence ,diabetes ,HbA1c ,metabolic control ,Specialist Studies in Education ,Education ,Education systems ,Specialist studies in education ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
The relation between metabolic control (HbA1c) and achievement (grade point average [GPA]) was examined over a period of 2.5 years (every 6 months) employing a dynamical systems approach that allowed for the examination of whether HbA1c was associated with change in subsequent GPA and vice versa. Metabolic control tends to deteriorate (i.e., with higher HbA1c reflecting poorer metabolic control) during adolescence. It was hypothesized that these higher levels of HbA1c would limit subsequent increases in GPA. The sample included 252 adolescents (Mbaseline age = 12.49 years, SD = 1.53; 53.6% female) with Type 1 diabetes. Mothers' report and school records provided information on relevant demographics and GPA; medical records provided values of HbA1c. Two simultaneous coupled change equations (i.e., examining current values in 1 variable associated with changes in the other) controlling relevant risk indicators (i.e., age, sex, disease duration, insulin delivery method, IQ) revealed higher levels of HbA1c limited increases in GPA. Higher levels of GPA, however, were not associated with change in HbA1c except for 2 instances where moderation existed by disease duration and IQ. Higher GPA was associated with slower increases in HbA1c over time for youth with shorter disease duration and lower IQ. These results affirm the importance of maintaining good metabolic control to facilitate adequate school performance across the adolescent years. Further, the results suggest that factors related to school achievement may protect adolescents who are newly diagnosed or who have low cognitive ability from subsequent deterioration in metabolic control. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2017
32. Adolescent Disclosure to Parents and Daily Management of Type 1 Diabetes.
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Berg, Cynthia, Queen, Tara, Butner, Jonathan, Turner, Sara, Hughes Lansing, Amy, Anderson, Jessica, Thoma, Brian, Winnick, Joel, Main, Alexandra, and Wiebe, Deborah
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adolescents ,diabetes ,family functioning ,Adolescent ,Blood Glucose ,Blood Glucose Self-Monitoring ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Disease Management ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Parent-Child Relations ,Truth Disclosure - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine how adolescents’ daily disclosure to parents about type 1 diabetes management may foster a process whereby parents gain knowledge and are viewed as helpful in ways that may aid diabetes management. METHODS: A total of 236 late adolescents (M age = 17.76) completed a 14-day diary where they reported daily disclosure to, and solicitation from, their parents, how knowledgeable and helpful parents were, and their self-regulation failures and adherence; blood glucose was gathered from meters. RESULTS: Multilevel models revealed that adolescent disclosure occurred in the context of greater parent solicitation and face-to-face contact and was positively associated with adolescents’ perceptions of parental knowledge and helpfulness. Disclosure to mothers (but not to fathers) was associated with better diabetes management (fewer self-regulation failures, better adherence). CONCLUSIONS: Adolescent disclosure may be an important way that parents remain knowledgeable about diabetes management and provide assistance that serves to support diabetes management.
- Published
- 2017
33. Neighborhood disadvantage, parent-adolescent relationship quality, and type 1 diabetes in late adolescents transitioning to early emerging adulthood
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Mello, Daniel, Wiebe, Deborah, Baker, Ashley C., Butner, Jonathan, and Berg, Cynthia
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- 2020
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34. The separation in coordination between social- and self-regulation for emerging adults with type 1 diabetes
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Munion, A. K., Butner, Jonathan E., Kelly, Caitlin S., Wiebe, Deborah J., Turner, Sara L., Lansing, Amy Hughes, and Berg, Cynthia A.
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Young adults -- Health aspects -- Social aspects -- Behavior ,Diabetes therapy -- Social aspects -- Psychological aspects ,Type 1 diabetes -- Care and treatment -- Social aspects ,Self-control -- Health aspects ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
To examine how self-regulation and social-regulation surrounding type 1 diabetes (T1D) management are coordinated during early emerging adulthood and whether classes of coordination relate to HbA1c and executive functioning (EF). Emerging adult participants (N = 212) with T1D (M age = 18.8 years, SD = .40) completed a 14-day diary to capture components of self-regulation and social-regulation. A mixture multi-level latent coordination model first determined the separate but coordinated factor structure of self- and social-regulation, then determined the number of distinct classes of coordination and how those classes linked to HbA1c and EF. The best-fitting model included three coordinative factors (self, mother, and father) of regulation and two distinct classes. The class with lower HbA1c and higher EF had more stable self- and social-regulation, more connections between self- and social-regulation and reflected more adaptive patterns, consistent with medical management goals. Social connection with parents may aid in regulation during this at-risk transitional time of emerging adulthood., Author(s): A. K. Munion [sup.1] , Jonathan E. Butner [sup.1] , Caitlin S. Kelly [sup.1] , Deborah J. Wiebe [sup.2] , Sara L. Turner [sup.1] , Amy Hughes Lansing [sup.1] [...]
- Published
- 2020
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35. The benefits of daily exercise on blood glucose levels and affect among adults with type 1 diabetes
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Tracy, Eunjin Lee, Berg, Cynthia A., Kent de Grey, Robert G., Allen, Nancy A., Litchman, Michelle L., Butner, Jonathan, and Helgeson, Vicki S.
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Exercise -- Health aspects -- Physiological aspects -- Psychological aspects ,Type 1 diabetes -- Psychological aspects -- Care and treatment ,Blood sugar -- Health aspects -- Control ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate the concurrent and lagged effects of daily exercise on daily blood glucose level and affect among persons with type 1 diabetes (T1D). 199 persons with T1D (M.sub.age = 46.82) completed a 14-day diary in which they reported on their engagement in moderate to vigorous exercise for 30 min and positive and negative affect. Daily blood glucose (BG) was gathered through study-provided glucometers. Multilevel modeling examined the effects of daily variability in (within-person effects) and average levels of (between-person effects) daily exercise on BG and affect. On days when persons with T1D reported they exercised moderately to vigorously for 30 min, they had lower mean BG, higher risk for low BG, lower negative affect, and higher positive affect on the same day as well as lower mean BG on the following day. Engaging in daily exercise is important in managing daily blood glucose and affect among persons with T1D, but can be complicated by hypoglycemia., Author(s): Eunjin Lee Tracy [sup.1] , Cynthia A. Berg [sup.1] , Robert G. Kent de Grey [sup.1] , Nancy A. Allen [sup.2] , Michelle L. Litchman [sup.2] , Jonathan Butner [...]
- Published
- 2020
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36. The Social Context of Managing Diabetes Across the Life Span
- Author
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Wiebe, Deborah J, Helgeson, Vicki, and Berg, Cynthia A
- Subjects
Behavioral and Social Science ,Aging ,Pediatric ,Diabetes ,Prevention ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 2 ,Female ,Humans ,Interpersonal Relations ,Male ,Patient Compliance ,Quality of Life ,Self Care ,Social Support ,diabetes management ,social support ,family ,adolescent ,emerging adult ,couples ,peers ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Social Psychology - Abstract
Diabetes self-management is crucial to maintaining quality of life and preventing long-term complications, and it occurs daily in the context of close interpersonal relationships. This article examines how social relationships are central to meeting the complex demands of managing Type I and Type 2 diabetes across the life span. The social context of diabetes management includes multiple resources, including family (parents, spouses), peers, romantic partners, and health care providers. We discuss how these social resources change across the life span, focusing on childhood and adolescence, emerging adulthood, and adulthood and aging. We review how diabetes both affects and is affected by key social relationships at each developmental period. Despite high variability in how the social context is conceptualized and measured across studies, findings converge on the characteristics of social relationships that facilitate or undermine diabetes management across the life span. These characteristics are consistent with both Interpersonal Theory and Self-Determination Theory, 2 organizing frameworks that we utilize to explore social behaviors that are related to diabetes management. Involvement and support from one's social partners, particularly family members, is consistently associated with good diabetes outcomes when characterized by warmth, collaboration, and acceptance. Underinvolvement and interactions characterized by conflict and criticism are consistently associated with poor diabetes outcomes. Intrusive involvement that contains elements of social control may undermine diabetes management, particularly when it impinges on self-efficacy. Implications for future research directions and for interventions that promote the effective use of the social context to improve diabetes self-management are discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2016
37. Adolescent Disclosure to Parents and Daily Management of Type 1 Diabetes.
- Author
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Berg, Cynthia A, Queen, Tara, Butner, Jonathan E, Turner, Sara L, Hughes Lansing, Amy, Main, Alexandra, Anderson, Jessica H, Thoma, Brian C, Winnick, Joel B, and Wiebe, Deborah J
- Subjects
adolescents ,diabetes ,family functioning ,Pediatric ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Pediatric Cancer ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Neurosciences ,Rare Diseases ,6.6 Psychological and behavioural ,Mental Health ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Psychology - Abstract
OBJECTIVE : To examine how adolescents' daily disclosure to parents about type 1 diabetes management may foster a process whereby parents gain knowledge and are viewed as helpful in ways that may aid diabetes management. METHODS: A total of 236 late adolescents (M age = 17.76) completed a 14-day diary where they reported daily disclosure to, and solicitation from, their parents, how knowledgeable and helpful parents were, and their self-regulation failures and adherence; blood glucose was gathered from meters. RESULTS: Multilevel models revealed that adolescent disclosure occurred in the context of greater parent solicitation and face-to-face contact and was positively associated with adolescents' perceptions of parental knowledge and helpfulness. Disclosure to mothers (but not to fathers) was associated with better diabetes management (fewer self-regulation failures, better adherence). CONCLUSIONS: Adolescent disclosure may be an important way that parents remain knowledgeable about diabetes management and provide assistance that serves to support diabetes management.
- Published
- 2016
38. The Relation of Questionnaire and Performance-Based Measures of Executive Functioning With Type 1 Diabetes Outcomes Among Late Adolescents
- Author
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Suchy, Yana, Turner, Sara L, Queen, Tara L, Durracio, Kara, Wiebe, Deborah J, Butner, Jonathan, Franchow, Emilie I, White, Perrin C, Murray, Mary A, Swinyard, Michael, and Berg, Cynthia A
- Subjects
Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Diabetes ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Mental health ,executive functioning ,Type 1 diabetes ,adolescents ,self-regulation ,adherence ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health ,Health sciences - Abstract
Successfully managing Type 1 diabetes involves adherence to a complex daily medical regimen, requiring self-regulatory skills that rely on neurocognitive processes known as executive functioning (EF). Adolescents with poorer rated EF abilities display poorer diabetes outcomes. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship of EF questionnaire and performance measures with adherence and glycemic control, after controlling for IQ and general questionnaire response style. Adolescents with Type 1 diabetes (M age = 17.74, SD = .38 years) and their mothers (N = 196) completed a self/mother-report questionnaire assessing adolescents' ratings of EF abilities (Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Functioning-Self-Report). Adolescents also completed performance-based tests of EF (Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System) and intellectual functioning (Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, 4th ed., Vocabulary). Adherence was indexed via 2 self-report inventories and the number of daily blood glucose checks, and glycemic control via HbA1c obtained from assay kits. Self/mother-reports of EF ability were associated with self/mother-reported adherence. Both questionnaire and performance-based measures of EF were associated with glycemic control. However, once IQ was taken into consideration, performance-based EF was no longer associated with glycemic control; IQ independently shared variance with glycemic control. Our findings suggest that self-reports of EF may be useful in identifying late adolescents who need assistance in managing diabetes in daily life. The finding that performance-based EF measures were not related to glycemic control independent of underlying intellectual capacity raises questions about the specific role of EF in diabetes outcomes. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2016
39. Self-Control, Daily Negative Affect, and Blood Glucose Control in Adolescents With Type 1 Diabetes
- Author
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Lansing, Amy Hughes, Berg, Cynthia A, Butner, Jonathan, and Wiebe, Deborah J
- Subjects
Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Pediatric ,Autoimmune Disease ,Diabetes ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Type 1 diabetes ,adolescence ,self-regulation ,daily processes ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health ,Health sciences - Abstract
For adolescents with Type 1 diabetes, maintaining optimal daily blood glucose control is a complex self-regulatory process that likely requires self-control. This study examined whether higher self-control was associated with lower daily negative affect about diabetes and, in turn, better daily blood glucose control, that is, lower mean daily blood glucose (MBG) and smaller standard deviations of daily blood glucose (SDBG), through 2 paths: (1) self-control maintaining lower mean level of negative affect and (2) self-control buffering the association of the number of daily diabetes problems with daily negative affect. Adolescents (M age = 12.87 years) with Type 1 diabetes (n = 180) completed an initial survey containing a self-report measure of self-control. Nightly electronic diaries were completed for 14 days during which adolescents reported daily problems with and negative affect about diabetes and used a study-provided blood glucose meter. Hypotheses were examined through multilevel modeling. Lower mean levels of daily negative affect partially mediated the relation between higher adolescent self-control and lower MBG. Adolescent self-control also buffered the association of the number of daily problems with daily negative affect, and smaller fluctuations in daily negative affect were associated with lower SDBG. Adolescent self-control is associated with daily affect regulatory processes that may influence MBG. However, fluctuations in daily negative affect about diabetes may represent a unique within-subject daily process associated with SDBG. These findings suggest that studies examining daily disease processes and interventions targeting daily affect regulation may be important to improving health in adolescents with Type 1 diabetes. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2016
40. Acceptability and Feasibility of FAMS-T1D mHealth intervention to optimize self- & social regulation for emerging adults with type 1 diabetes
- Author
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Mayberry, Lindsay S., primary, Wiebe, Deborah, additional, Parks, Makenzie, additional, Campbell, MaryJane, additional, Beam, Aislinn, additional, and Berg, Cynthia, additional
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
41. Communal coping and glycemic control: Daily patterns among young adult couples with type 1 diabetes.
- Author
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Yorgason, Jeremy B., primary, Noorda, Naomi M., additional, Steeger, Danielle, additional, Saylor, Jennifer, additional, Berg, Cynthia, additional, Davey, Adam, additional, Rellaford, Susannah, additional, Kirkham, Daylee, additional, Saunders, James, additional, and Taylor, Evangeline, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Secrecy From Parents and Type 1 Diabetes Management in Late Adolescence.
- Author
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Main, Alexandra, Wiebe, Deborah J, Van Bogart, Karina, Turner, Sara L, Tucker, Christy, Butner, Jonathan E, and Berg, Cynthia A
- Subjects
Humans ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Blood Glucose ,Adolescent Behavior ,Disclosure ,Parent-Child Relations ,Parents ,Confidentiality ,Adolescent ,Disease Management ,Female ,Male ,Glycated Hemoglobin A ,conduct problems ,disclosure ,late adolescence ,relationship quality ,secrecy ,type 1 diabetes ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Psychology - Abstract
ObjectivesThis study examined (a) associations of parent-adolescent relationship characteristics and adolescent problem behavior with late adolescents' secrecy from parents about type 1 diabetes management, and (b) whether secrecy was associated with diabetes and psychological outcomes independently of these factors.MethodsAdolescents (N = 247, Mage = 17.76 years) completed survey measures of diabetes-related secrecy from parents, disclosure, parental acceptance, parental knowledge, and conduct problems. Mothers and adolescents reported on adolescent adherence to diabetes regimens and adolescents reported their depressive symptoms. Glycemic control was obtained from HbA1c test kits.ResultsAdolescent-reported disclosure to parents was uniquely negatively associated with secrecy from parents. Controlling for relationship variables, conduct problems, and sociodemographic and illness-related variables, secrecy from mothers was uniquely associated with poorer glycemic control and secrecy from both parents was associated with lower adherence.ConclusionsSecrecy about type 1 diabetes management is uniquely associated with diabetes outcomes independent of other relationship characteristics and problem behaviors.
- Published
- 2015
43. Depressive Symptoms, Daily Stress, and Adherence in Late Adolescents With Type 1 Diabetes
- Author
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Baucom, Katherine JW, Queen, Tara L, Wiebe, Deborah J, Turner, Sara L, Wolfe, Kristin L, Godbey, Elida I, Fortenberry, Katherine T, Mansfield, Jessica H, and Berg, Cynthia A
- Subjects
Diabetes ,Pediatric ,Depression ,Mental Health ,Autoimmune Disease ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Blood Glucose ,Blood Glucose Self-Monitoring ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Female ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Insulin ,Male ,Patient Compliance ,Stress ,Psychological ,depression ,stress ,diabetes ,adolescents ,diary methods ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine whether depressive symptoms are associated with greater perceived daily stress and moderate the link between stress severity and poorer daily adherence in late adolescents with Type 1 diabetes (T1D).Method175 late adolescents with T1D completed measures of depressive symptoms and glycemic control during a baseline laboratory assessment. This assessment was followed by a 14-day daily diary during which adolescents rated the severity of general (GS) and diabetes-specific (DSS) stressful events, as well as adherence to their diabetes regimen.ResultsMultilevel modeling revealed that adolescents with more depressive symptoms reported more severe daily stress and poorer daily adherence on average, and had poorer glycemic control. On days with more severe DSS, but not GS, adolescents reported poorer adherence. This association was moderated by an interaction between depressive symptoms and the mean level of DSS severity experienced across the 2-week diary. In adolescents with low levels of depressive symptoms, poorer adherence was reported on days with more severe DSS across all levels of mean DSS severity. In adolescents with average or high levels of depressive symptoms, poorer adherence was reported on days with more severe DSS only when mean DSS severity was average or high.ConclusionsDepressive symptoms are associated with poorer daily adherence and greater stress severity, and interact with mean DSS severity to moderate the link between daily stress and adherence. The results point to the importance of depressive symptoms for understanding associations between stress and adherence during late adolescence.
- Published
- 2015
44. Family care exchanges across the life span
- Author
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Berg, Cynthia A., primary, Kelly, Caitlin S., additional, and Utz, Rebecca L., additional
- Published
- 2021
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45. List of contributors
- Author
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Aldwin, Carolyn M., primary, Alea, Nicole, additional, Anstey, Kaarin J., additional, Berg, Cynthia A., additional, Bluck, Susan, additional, Boker, Steven M., additional, Brien, Jennifer L. O’, additional, Brothers, Allyson F., additional, Catherine McCall, A., additional, Chen, Cheng, additional, Damoiseaux, Jessica S., additional, Diehl, Manfred, additional, Dixon, Roger A., additional, Elliott, Amanda F., additional, Festini, Sara B., additional, Francioli, Stephane P., additional, Geerligs, Linda, additional, Greenberg, Jeff, additional, Horgas, Ann L., additional, Jantz, Tiffany K., additional, Kelly, Caitlin S., additional, Kerr, Deborah L., additional, Krieger, Michael L., additional, Lee, Hyunyup, additional, Liem, Franziskus, additional, Lin, Ziyong, additional, Lustig, Cindy, additional, Margulies, Daniel S., additional, Marson, Daniel C., additional, Mast, Benjamin T., additional, Maxfield, Molly, additional, McLaren, Donald G., additional, Nathaniel Watson, F., additional, Nesselroade, John R., additional, North, Michael S., additional, Pruchno, Rachel, additional, Reuter-Lorenz, Patricia A., additional, Schaie, K. Warner, additional, Sharma, Shubam, additional, Stelzer, Eva-Maria, additional, Sundar, S. Shyam, additional, Utz, Rebecca L., additional, Wahl, Hans-Werner, additional, Whitbourne, Susan Krauss, additional, Willis, Sherry L., additional, Yancura, Loriena, additional, and Yochim, Brian P., additional
- Published
- 2021
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46. Collaborative Problem Solving, Crises, and Well-Being
- Author
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Schindler, Ines, primary and Berg, Cynthia A., additional
- Published
- 2021
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47. Assessing helpful and harmful family and friend involvement in adults’ type 2 diabetes self-management
- Author
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Mayberry, Lindsay S., Berg, Cynthia A., Greevy, Robert A., Jr., and Wallston, Kenneth A.
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- 2019
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48. Individual Differences and Day-to-Day Fluctuations in Perceived Self-Regulation Associated With Daily Adherence in Late Adolescents With Type 1 Diabetes
- Author
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Berg, Cynthia A, Wiebe, Deborah J, Suchy, Yana, Hughes, Amy E, Anderson, Jessica H, Godbey, Elida I, Butner, Jonathan, Tucker, Christy, Franchow, Emilie I, Pihlaskari, Andrea K, King, Pamela S, Murray, Mary A, and White, Perrin C
- Subjects
Diabetes ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Behavior ,Blood Glucose ,Blood Glucose Self-Monitoring ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Female ,Glycated Hemoglobin A ,Humans ,Individuality ,Male ,Patient Compliance ,Self Care ,Self Concept ,Self-Control ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,adherence ,adolescents ,diabetes ,executive function ,self-regulation ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine whether individual differences and intraindividual (within-person day-to-day) fluctuations in late adolescents' self-regulation were associated with daily adherence to the type 1 diabetes regimen. Methods 110 school seniors (M age = 17.78 years) and their mothers assessed adolescents' skills underlying self-regulation (executive function, attention, self-control, behavioral inhibition and activation, emotion regulation) and adherence, with glycosylated hemoglobin from medical records. Teens completed daily diaries reporting self-regulation failures surrounding monitoring blood glucose, adherence, and number of blood glucose checks each day for 14 days. Results Hierarchical Linear Models indicated that better daily adherence was associated with teen and mother reports of better self-regulation skills and teens' reports of fewer daily self-regulation failures. Daily adherence was unrelated to temperamental differences in behavioral inhibition and activation. Conclusions Results indicate that both individual and intraindividual differences in self-regulation contribute to daily adherence highlighting the importance of daily self-regulatory challenges to adherence.
- Published
- 2014
49. Longitudinal Trajectories of Illness Perceptions Among Adolescents With Type 1 Diabetes
- Author
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Fortenberry, Katherine T, Berg, Cynthia A, King, Pamela S, Stump, Tammy, Butler, Jorie M, Pham, Phung K, and Wiebe, Deborah J
- Subjects
Diabetes ,Autoimmune Disease ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Attitude to Health ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Disease Management ,Female ,Glycated Hemoglobin A ,Humans ,Male ,Patient Compliance ,Perception ,Quality of Life ,Self Care ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,adherence ,adolescents ,illness perceptions ,metabolic control ,quality of life ,type 1 diabetes ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
ObjectivesTo examine development in illness perceptions of type 1 diabetes across adolescence and relationships with intelligence, diabetes responsibility, and diabetes outcomes.MethodsIllness perceptions were measured via the Illness Perceptions Questionnaire at 3 times, every 6 months in 213 adolescents (M age = 13.00; SD = 1.54) with type 1 diabetes. Intelligence and adolescents' perceived responsibility for diabetes were examined, and adolescents' report of adherence and quality of life (QOL), and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) from medical records addressed diabetes-related outcomes.ResultsLinear growth models showed significant increases in perceptions of diabetes coherence, chronicity, consequences, personal and treatment control, and decreases in diabetes cyclicality and parental control across time. More favorable illness perceptions were generally associated with adolescent intelligence at baseline, more adolescent responsibility for management, better adherence and QOL, and lower HbA1c at each time point.ConclusionsResults suggest that adolescents develop complex illness perceptions, which are associated with better diabetes management.
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- 2014
50. Developmental Processes Associated With Longitudinal Declines in Parental Responsibility and Adherence to Type 1 Diabetes Management Across Adolescence
- Author
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Wiebe, Deborah J, Chow, Chong Man, Palmer, Debra L, Butner, Jonathan, Butler, Jorie M, Osborn, Peter, and Berg, Cynthia A
- Subjects
Diabetes ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Pediatric ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Behavior ,Adolescent Development ,Child ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Disease Management ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Medication Adherence ,Parent-Child Relations ,Parenting ,Parents ,Self Care ,Self Efficacy ,adherence ,adolescents ,longitudinal research ,parenting ,puberty ,self-efficacy ,type 1 diabetes ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo identify whether changes in pubertal status and self-efficacy for diabetes management are associated with longitudinal declines in parental responsibility for diabetes, and to determine whether these factors moderate associations between declining parental responsibility and deteriorating adherence across adolescence.MethodsAdolescents (N = 252; 53.6% females) with type 1 diabetes, mothers, and 188 fathers participated in a 2.5-year longitudinal study. Self-reports of pubertal status, adolescent efficacy, parental responsibility, and adherence were completed every 6 months (6 time points).ResultsLatent growth curve modeling revealed that longitudinal increases in efficacy and pubertal maturation were uniquely associated with longitudinal declines in parental responsibility. Declines in parental responsibility were related to deterioration in adherence especially when adolescents did not report concomitant growth in self-efficacy.ConclusionsTransfer of responsibility for diabetes management across adolescence may be more optimal when adolescents' increased independence is titrated to their changing self-efficacy beliefs.
- Published
- 2014
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