Distress and type 2 diabetes self-care: Putting the pieces together

Abstract

Abstract Background

Conflicting research emphasizes depression, diabetes distress, or well-being in relation to diabetes self-care and risk for poor health outcomes.

Purpose

The purpose of this study was to test whether a latent variable for general psychological distress derived from shared variance of depression symptoms, diabetes distress, and well-being predicts a latent variable of diabetes self-care and to examine evidence for unique effects once shared effects are adjusted for.

Methods

Adults with suboptimally controlled diabetes were recruited from the South Bronx, NY, for a telephonic diabetes self-management support trial. Baseline diabetes self-care, medication adherence, depression symptoms, diabetes distress, and well-being were measured by validated self-report. Structural equation modeling specified a latent variable for general psychological distress derived from shared variance of depression symptoms, diabetes distress, and well-being. Diabetes self-care was a latent variable indicated by diet, glucose self-monitoring, and medication adherence.

Results

Participants (N = 627, 65% female) were predominantly ethnic minority (70% Hispanic; 45% Black) and 77% reported household income <$20K/year. Mean (standard deviation) age = 56 (12) years; A1c = 9.1% (1.9%); body mass index = 32 (8) kg/m2. The latent variable for psychological distress was a robust predictor of poorer diabetes self-care (coefficient = −0.59 [confidence interval = −0.71, −0.46], p < .001) with good model fit. Unique paths from depression symptoms, diabetes distress, and well-being (all ps > .99) to self-care were not observed.

Conclusions

In this population of disadvantaged adults with suboptimally controlled diabetes, general psychological distress was strongly associated with poorer diabetes self-care and fully accounted for the effects of depression, diabetes distress, and positive well-being. This suggests that general distress may underlie previously reported associations between these constructs and diabetes self-care.

Description

Scholarly article / Open access

Keywords

Psychological distress, Depression, Diabetes distress, Well-being, Self-care behavior, Type 2 diabetes

Citation

Hoogendoorn, C. J., Schechter, C. B., Llabre, M. M., Walker, E. A., & Gonzalez, J. S. (2021). Distress and type 2 diabetes self-care: Putting the pieces together. Annals of Behavioral Medicine: A Publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, 55(10), 938–948. https://doi.org/10.1093/abm/kaaa070