Objective. To evaluate (1) the longitudinal relationship between parental well-being and glycemic control in youth with type 1 diabetes and (2) if youth's problem behavior, diabetes parenting behavior, and parental diabetes-distress influence this relationship. Research Design and Methods. Parents of youth 8-15 yrs (at baseline) (N = 174) participating in the DINO study completed questionnaires at three time waves (1 yr interval). Using generalized estimating equations, the relationship between parental well-being (WHO-5) and youth's HbA1c was examined. Second, relationships between WHO-5, Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ), Diabetes Family Behavior Checklist (DFBC), Problem Areas In Diabetes-Parent Revised (PAID-Pr) scores, and ...
Type 1 diabetes is one of the most common pediatric chronic illnesses. Adolescents are at risk for p...
Objective: The purpose of this study was to highlight parent distress in diabetes, identify factors ...
OBJECTIVE: Parental monitoring of adolescents\u27 diabetes self-care is associated with better adher...
Objective. To evaluate (1) the longitudinal relationship between parental well-being and glycemic co...
Objective. To evaluate (1) the longitudinal relationship between parental well-being and glycemic co...
Objective: This study examined associations between the functioning of youth with type 1 diabetes an...
Objective This study examined predictive and mediated relationships among youth perception of critic...
Background: Type 1 diabetes in young children is a heavy parental burden. As part of pilot phase of ...
Background: Type 1 diabetes in young children is a heavy parental burden. As part of pilot phase of ...
Introduction. Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) is a chronic condition accompanied by strict treatment guideline...
UNLABELLED: To test whether parenting stress and the quality of parent-child interaction were associ...
Background: Insulin treatment of children with type 1 diabetes requires multiple medical decisions a...
AIMS: The aim of this study was to compare families with a child (2-12 years) with type 1 diabetes (...
To test whether parenting stress and the quality of parent–child interaction were associated with gl...
OBJECTIVE: To examine the association of adolescent and parent diabetes distress with perceived con...
Type 1 diabetes is one of the most common pediatric chronic illnesses. Adolescents are at risk for p...
Objective: The purpose of this study was to highlight parent distress in diabetes, identify factors ...
OBJECTIVE: Parental monitoring of adolescents\u27 diabetes self-care is associated with better adher...
Objective. To evaluate (1) the longitudinal relationship between parental well-being and glycemic co...
Objective. To evaluate (1) the longitudinal relationship between parental well-being and glycemic co...
Objective: This study examined associations between the functioning of youth with type 1 diabetes an...
Objective This study examined predictive and mediated relationships among youth perception of critic...
Background: Type 1 diabetes in young children is a heavy parental burden. As part of pilot phase of ...
Background: Type 1 diabetes in young children is a heavy parental burden. As part of pilot phase of ...
Introduction. Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) is a chronic condition accompanied by strict treatment guideline...
UNLABELLED: To test whether parenting stress and the quality of parent-child interaction were associ...
Background: Insulin treatment of children with type 1 diabetes requires multiple medical decisions a...
AIMS: The aim of this study was to compare families with a child (2-12 years) with type 1 diabetes (...
To test whether parenting stress and the quality of parent–child interaction were associated with gl...
OBJECTIVE: To examine the association of adolescent and parent diabetes distress with perceived con...
Type 1 diabetes is one of the most common pediatric chronic illnesses. Adolescents are at risk for p...
Objective: The purpose of this study was to highlight parent distress in diabetes, identify factors ...
OBJECTIVE: Parental monitoring of adolescents\u27 diabetes self-care is associated with better adher...