Social Support and Self-care Outcomes in Adults with Diabetes: The Mediating Effects of Self-efficacy and Diabetes Distress. Results of the Second Diabetes MILES - Australia (MILES-2) Study

Carina K Y Chan, Wendell Cockshaw, Kimberley Smith, Elizabeth Holmes-Truscott, Frans Pouwer, Jane Speight

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

AIMS: Diabetes self-care outcomes are positively impacted by social support. Understanding the mechanisms involved can inform more effective interventions. This study tested potential cross-sectional mediation of social support through self-efficacy and diabetes distress for self-care and clinical outcomes (diet, physical activity, blood glucose monitoring, HbA1c).

METHOD: We analysed a sub-sample of the Australian Diabetes MILES-2 cross-sectional online survey (N=1727). Measures were: Diabetes Social Support Scale, Confidence in Diabetes Self-care Scale, Problem Areas In Diabetes scale, diet and physical activity subscales of the Summary of Diabetes Self-Care Activities, and self-reported HbA1c. Separate mediation path models were tested for each of the four self-care/clinical outcomes in groups with type 1 and type 2 (insulin- and non-insulin-treated) diabetes.

RESULTS: Social support was associated with more optimal self-care and self-reported HbA1c outcomes. When diabetes-specific self-efficacy and distress were included as mediators, the direct path from social support became non-significant. Conversely, the indirect effects of social support through diabetes-specific self-efficacy and distress were significant across all diabetes groups and outcomes.

CONCLUSION: Diabetes-specific self-efficacy and distress may be important mechanisms linking social support with diabetes self-care and clinical outcomes. Social support interventions could explore whether improving diabetes self-efficacy and decreasing diabetes distress could help improve self-care.

Original languageEnglish
Article number108314
JournalDiabetes Research and Clinical Practice
Volume166
ISSN0168-8227
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2020

Bibliographical note

Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • Diabetes
  • Diabetes distress
  • Health behaviour
  • Self-care
  • Self-efficacy
  • Social support

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