817-P: Financial Stress Factors, Psychological Factors, and Self-Management Outcomes in Emerging Adults with Type 1 Diabetes

2020 
Emerging adults, ages 18-25, with type 1 diabetes (T1D) may be vulnerable to financial and psychological barriers to self-management as they grapple with the developmental milestones of financial and self-management independence. This correlational, cross-sectional study described the relationships among financial stress factors (perceived stress, financial stress, and financial independence) and psychological factors (depressive symptoms, trait anxiety, and diabetes distress) on self-management outcomes (HbA1c and diabetes-related quality of life [DQoL]) in emerging adults with T1D. Data from 413 emerging adults recruited from the T1D Exchange (mean age 22.1±1.83 years; 62% female; 80.4% white; 37.3% private high-deductible insurance; T1D duration 13.2±4.41 years; 8.0±1.6 HbA1c) were analyzed. The Perceived Stress Scale, Personal Financial Well-Being Scale, Willingness to Pay Scale, Financial Independence Visual Analog Scale, Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression Inventory, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, Diabetes Distress Scale and DQoL Measure were completed via REDCap surveys. Hierarchical Multiple Regression analyses revealed that 20.6% of variance in HbA1c (F=15.555, p Disclosure J.E. Blanchette: Other Relationship; Self; Tandem Diabetes Care. V.B. Toly: None. J.R. Wood: Research Support; Self; AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Speaker’s Bureau; Self; Xeris Pharmaceuticals, Inc. C.M. Musil: None. D.L. Morris: None. M.E. Votruba: None. Funding Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing; Sigma Theta Tau International
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