Location
Culp Center Ballroom
Start Date
4-25-2023 9:00 AM
End Date
4-25-2023 11:00 AM
Poster Number
36
Faculty Sponsor’s Department
Biostatistics & Epidemiology
Name of Project's Faculty Sponsor
Shoham David
Competition Type
Competitive
Type
Poster Presentation
Project's Category
Child Health, Public Health
Abstract or Artist's Statement
In 2019, diabetes affected approximately 283,000 individuals, aged 20 years or younger, in the U.S. Due to illness symptoms (e.g., hypo/hyperglycemia) and disease-related complications (e.g., nephropathy), individuals report poor health-related quality of life. However, individual-level, family-oriented, and health care system factors may affect perceptions of a child’s overall health status. For example, beliefs of having spent enough time with the doctor may predict proactive health behaviors and perceptions of health. Overall health status may also be indirectly related to time spent in medical conversations. For instance, perceptions of shared decision-making (e.g., exploring pros and cons of treatments together) between families and providers may, in turn, foster family empowerment and resiliency (i.e., ability to adapt, cope, and overcome challenges) in the context of caring for a child with a chronic illness, with positive implications for perceived health status of their child. This study aims to examine the relationships of these variables.
At the bivariate level, it was hypothesized that time spent in visits, shared decision making, family resilience, and perceived health status of the child would all be positively related. At the multivariate level, it was hypothesized that doctors working collaboratively with parents and family resilience would serially mediate the relation between time spent in medical visits and perceived health, such that more time spent with the doctor would be associated with perception of collaborative decision making and, in turn, higher levels of resiliency and better overall health status from parents’ perspectives.
Utilizing data from the National Survey of Child and Adolescent Health from 2020-2021, this study examined survey responses from 369 parents of children with a reported diabetes diagnosis. Responses were extracted from a larger survey for questions related to time spent with providers in prevention focused visits, collaborative decision-making, family resilience, and health status of the child. Bivariate correlations and serial mediation analyses, per Hayes (2013), were conducted, covarying age, sex, ethnicity of child, health insurance, family structure, income, and education level of parents.
Bivariate analyses showed some variables were significantly related in hypothesized directions (p < .05). In serial mediation analyses (10,000 bootstrapped samples), the total effect of time spent with the doctor on overall health status was nonsignificant (t = 0.7767, p = 0.4383), and the direct effect was also nonsignificant when mediators (i.e., collaborative decision making, family resilience) were added (t = 0.805 CI= -0.0044, 0.0122), indicating no serial mediation. Controlling for the effects of the other mediator, a significant indirect effect was found through collaborative decision making (t= 1.9181 CI = 0.0015-0.0940) but not family resilience (t = 0.9565 CI=-0.0059-0.478).
This study demonstrates that collaborative decision making with parents mediates the relationship between time spent in preventative health care visits and overall health status. Changes such as policies that incentivize quality of care rather than number of billable visits, or establishment of patient centered medical homes, could support appointments of sufficient length that would allow for collaboration and, in turn, better perceived health status for those affected by diabetes.
The Impact of Time in Doctor-Patient Encounters on Perceived Health Status of Children with Diabetes: Potential Mediating Roles of Shared Decision Making and Resilient Parents
Culp Center Ballroom
In 2019, diabetes affected approximately 283,000 individuals, aged 20 years or younger, in the U.S. Due to illness symptoms (e.g., hypo/hyperglycemia) and disease-related complications (e.g., nephropathy), individuals report poor health-related quality of life. However, individual-level, family-oriented, and health care system factors may affect perceptions of a child’s overall health status. For example, beliefs of having spent enough time with the doctor may predict proactive health behaviors and perceptions of health. Overall health status may also be indirectly related to time spent in medical conversations. For instance, perceptions of shared decision-making (e.g., exploring pros and cons of treatments together) between families and providers may, in turn, foster family empowerment and resiliency (i.e., ability to adapt, cope, and overcome challenges) in the context of caring for a child with a chronic illness, with positive implications for perceived health status of their child. This study aims to examine the relationships of these variables.
At the bivariate level, it was hypothesized that time spent in visits, shared decision making, family resilience, and perceived health status of the child would all be positively related. At the multivariate level, it was hypothesized that doctors working collaboratively with parents and family resilience would serially mediate the relation between time spent in medical visits and perceived health, such that more time spent with the doctor would be associated with perception of collaborative decision making and, in turn, higher levels of resiliency and better overall health status from parents’ perspectives.
Utilizing data from the National Survey of Child and Adolescent Health from 2020-2021, this study examined survey responses from 369 parents of children with a reported diabetes diagnosis. Responses were extracted from a larger survey for questions related to time spent with providers in prevention focused visits, collaborative decision-making, family resilience, and health status of the child. Bivariate correlations and serial mediation analyses, per Hayes (2013), were conducted, covarying age, sex, ethnicity of child, health insurance, family structure, income, and education level of parents.
Bivariate analyses showed some variables were significantly related in hypothesized directions (p < .05). In serial mediation analyses (10,000 bootstrapped samples), the total effect of time spent with the doctor on overall health status was nonsignificant (t = 0.7767, p = 0.4383), and the direct effect was also nonsignificant when mediators (i.e., collaborative decision making, family resilience) were added (t = 0.805 CI= -0.0044, 0.0122), indicating no serial mediation. Controlling for the effects of the other mediator, a significant indirect effect was found through collaborative decision making (t= 1.9181 CI = 0.0015-0.0940) but not family resilience (t = 0.9565 CI=-0.0059-0.478).
This study demonstrates that collaborative decision making with parents mediates the relationship between time spent in preventative health care visits and overall health status. Changes such as policies that incentivize quality of care rather than number of billable visits, or establishment of patient centered medical homes, could support appointments of sufficient length that would allow for collaboration and, in turn, better perceived health status for those affected by diabetes.