Women with type 1 diabetes during pregnancy and postpartum Well-being and diabetes management
Abstract
Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) is associated with increased medical risks during pregnancy and birth. To minimize the risks and increase the possibility of a healthy offspring, blood glucose levels near normal are required. This puts women with T1DM in a vulnerable situation in relation to pregnancy and childbirth, as it demands high levels of diabetes management.
The overall aim was to investigate well-being and diabetes management in women with T1DM during pregnancy and in the first six months postpartum.
Studies I, II and III mainly report on patient-reported outcome measures in terms of questionnaires. Studies I and III have an observational design and Study II was a randomized controlled trial. Study IV used a case study design and analysed data with both quantitative and qualitative methods.
In Study I, well-being and diabetes management in early pregnancy was explored. A higher degree of diabetes management correlated positively with self-perceived health and well-being and with less worry about diabetes distress and hypoglycemia. In Study II, a web-based support program during pregnancy and up to six months after childbirth was evaluated. The findings suggest that the web-based support and standard care was not superior to standard care alone in terms of general well-being or self-efficacy of diabetes management at six months postpartum and that few participants had a high activity level. In Study III, associations between well-being, diabetes management and breastfeeding postpartum were investigated. Participants with lower scores of general well-being and sense of coherence expressed a need for more professional support to manage their diabetes than they were offered. In Study IV, adherence to technological elements and study design in a web-based intervention were critically analysed. The results highlight that technology and study design matter and might mutually influence each other.
The findings confirm that well-being and diabetes management are closely linked during the childbearing period. Means of identifying a more vulnerable group of women with T1DM during pregnancy and new approaches to professional support after childbirth are needed.
Parts of work
I. Linden, K., Sparud-Lundin, C., Adolfsson, A. & Berg, M. Well-Being and Diabetes Management in Early Pregnant Women with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus.
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2016; 13: 836.
::doi::10.3390/ijerph13080836 II. Linden, K., Berg, M., Adolfsson, A. & Sparud-Lundin, C. Person-centred web-based support in pregnancy and early motherhood for women with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus – a randomized controlled trial. Diabetic Medicine 2018; 35: 234-243. ::doi::10.1111/dme.13552 III. Linden, K., Berg, M., Adolfsson, A. & Sparud-Lundin, C. Well-being, diabetes management and breastfeeding in mothers with type 1 diabetes – an explorative analysis. Sexual & Reproductive Healthcare 2018; 15: 77-82. ::doi::10.1016/j.srhc.2017.12.004 IV. Berg, M.*, Linden, K.*, Adolfsson, A., Sparud-Lundin, C. & Ranerup, A. A critical analysis of adherence to technological elements and study design – based on a web-based intervention for women with type 1 diabetes in pregnancy and early motherhood.
*The first authorship is shared between Berg and Linden. Submitted
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Health Care Sciences)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Health and Care Sciences
Disputation
Fredagen den 16 mars 2018, kl 13.00, Hörsal Arvid Carlsson, Academicum, Medicinaregatan 3, Göteborg
Date of defence
2018-03-16
karolina.linden@gu.se
Date
2018-02-19Author
Linden, Karolina
Keywords
well-being
self-management
type 1 diabetes mellitus
pregnancy
postpartum
patient-reported outcome measurement
eHealth
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-629-0432-6 (PRINT)
978-91-629-0433-3 (PDF)
Language
eng