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Examining Indirect Effects of Anxiety on Glycated Hemoglobin via Automatic Negative Thinking and Diabetes-Specific Distress in Adolescents With Type 1 Diabetes

In this study, we examined the indirect effects of anxiety on glycated hemoglobin (A1C) via automatic negative thinking and diabetes distress among adolescents with type 1 diabetes (T1D) during the follow-up interval of a randomized controlled trial of an intervention targeting resilience promotion/...

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Published in:Canadian journal of diabetes 2021-07, Vol.45 (5), p.473-480
Main Authors: Vesco, Anthony T., Howard, Kelsey R., Anderson, Lindsay M., Papadakis, Jaclyn L., Hood, Korey K., Weissberg-Benchell, Jill
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:In this study, we examined the indirect effects of anxiety on glycated hemoglobin (A1C) via automatic negative thinking and diabetes distress among adolescents with type 1 diabetes (T1D) during the follow-up interval of a randomized controlled trial of an intervention targeting resilience promotion/depression prevention. Adolescents (N=264) participating in the Supporting Teen Problem Solving clinical trial were included and assessed at 8, 12, 16 and 28 months postbaseline. A serial, double-mediation model was used to examine path effects from anxiety to A1C through automatic negative thinking, through diabetes distress and through both automatic negative thinking and diabetes distress. Relevant demographic and clinical covariates were included. Anxiety significantly predicted increases in both automatic negative thinking and diabetes distress. Automatic negative thinking was not found to mediate the association between anxiety and A1C, but diabetes distress did mediate the association. The double-mediation path through automatic negative thinking and diabetes distress together was significant. The indirect effect of anxiety on A1C through diabetes distress was significant and greater than the indirect effect of the double-mediator path. Anxiety did not predict A1C independent of its effects on automatic negative thinking and diabetes distress. Inclusion of demographic covariates did not substantively change the results. Analyses suggest that automatic negative thinking and diabetes distress mediate the relationship between anxiety and A1C among adolescents with T1D. Diabetes distress appears to be a robust factor linking anxiety to A1C. Diabetes distress should be further examined as a mediator of glycemic variability in anxious youth with T1D. Dans la présente étude, nous avons examiné les effets indirects de l’anxiété sur l’hémoglobine glyquée (A1c) par l’intermédiaire des pensées automatiques négatives et de la détresse liée au diabète chez les adolescents atteints du diabète de type 1 (DT1) durant la période de suivi d’un essai clinique à répartition aléatoire d’une intervention visant à favoriser la résilience et à prévenir la dépression. Nous avons sélectionné les adolescents (N = 264) qui participaient à l’essai clinique Supporting Teen Problem Solving et les avons évalués à 8, 12, 16 et 28 mois après l’évaluation initiale. Nous avons utilisé un modèle à deux médiateurs sériels pour examiner les effets de la trajectoire de l’anxiété à l’A1c par l’i
ISSN:1499-2671
2352-3840
DOI:10.1016/j.jcjd.2021.05.002