1993 Volume 32 Issue 10 Pages 763-767
Psychological and social factors can profoundly influence a patient's success in adhering to a prescribed self-care regimen. A total of 34 inpatients with type II diabetes who attended the diabetes education program at a single clinic were studied as a retrospective cohort, beginning between 6 and 12 months after discharge. At the start of the study, the patients were classified into two groups, those with good control and those with poor control of diabetes, based on the rate of change of the glycosylated hemoglobin (HbAlc) value relative to the value at admission. Data for each patient were collected retrospectively from their medical records. Patients' family function was assessed by the adaptability, partnership, growth, affection, and resolve (APGAR) scoring system. Multiple regression analysis was used to determine the effect of demographic, medical, and social factors on metabolic improvement. The family APGAR score was higher in the good control group than in the group with poor control.
(Internal Medicine 32: 763-767, 1993)