Julie L. Vandagriff's research while affiliated with Indiana University School of Medicine and other places

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Publications (5)


Fear of Hypoglycemia in the Parents of Children and Adolescents With Diabetes: Maladaptive or Healthy Response?
  • Article

May 1997

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48 Reads

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93 Citations

The Diabetes Educator

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Julie L. Vandagriff

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Naomi S. Fineberg

Sixty-one parents of children with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus completed modified versions of the Hypoglycemic Fear Survey (HFS) and the Diabetes Quality of Life (DQOL) scale. They also indicated their child's history of hypoglycemic-related seizures or loss of consciousness (SLC) events. Parental HFS scores were significantly greater if their child had ever experienced a SLC event or experienced a SLC event within the past year. Parental HFS scores were positively correlated with general parental worry about their child having diabetes. Adolescent children who experienced a SLC event during the past year reported greater HFS scores, greater general worry about diabetes, and a greater negative impact of having diabetes compared with adolescents with no such history. Despite the greater fear of hypoglycemia in parents and adolescents, there was no significant difference in HbA1 values between children with or without any history of SLC events or children with or without a SLC event within the past year.

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Using Telecommunication Technology to Manage Children with Diabetes: The Computer-Linked Outpatient Clinic (CLOC) Study
  • Article
  • Full-text available

July 1995

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198 Reads

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123 Citations

The Diabetes Educator

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Julie L. Vandagriff

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Kathy Kronz

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[...]

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The purpose of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of using a telecommunication system to assist in the outpatient management of pediatric patients with insulin-dependent diabetes. Metabolic control, patients' psychosocial status, family functioning, perceived quality of life, patterns of parental/child responsibility for daily diabetes maintenance, and nursing time-on-task were evaluated. One hundred six pediatric patients (mean age = 13.3 years) were randomly assigned to an experimental or control outpatient clinic for 1 year. Experimental subjects transmitted self-monitoring blood glucose data by modem to the hospital every 2 weeks. Transmitted data were reviewed by nurse practitioners who telephoned subjects to discuss regimen adjustments. Control subjects received standard care with regimen adjustments made by physicians. There were no significant between-group differences for metabolic control, rates of hospitalization or emergency-room visits, psychological status, general family functioning, quality of life, or parent-child responsibility. A significant decrease was noted in nursing time-on-task for experimental subjects.

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Using Nontraditional Methods to Teach Pediatric Residents About Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus

February 1993

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9 Reads

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1 Citation

The Diabetes Educator

The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of a training experience on the attitudes and beliefs of pediatric residents concerning insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM), persons with diabetes, and the use of a multidisciplinary team to empower patients/families. The resident training experience consisted of three days of diabetes lifestyle simulation including attending an educational program designed for newly-diagnosed patients and their families. Residents' attitudes, beliefs, and team function attitudes were measured at preinstruction, postinstruction, and 6 months following instruction. There was no significant change in beliefs about diabetes. Attitudes about persons with diabetes became more positive after the training experience, but did not continue after six months. Residents also expressed a change in team attitudes, specifically, in their acceptance of having the certified diabetes educator (CDE) nurse and the patient/family adjust insulin and manage insulin during illness.


Immediate HbA1c Results: Performance of new HbA1c system in pediatric outpatient population

September 1992

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195 Reads

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46 Citations

Diabetes Care

This study compared the performance of a new device that uses an IA to measure HbA1c in 9 min with a 1-microliter capillary blood sample with AC and CE methods in both nondiabetic and diabetic pediatric patients. Two hundred seven pediatric subjects (103 nondiabetic, 104 with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus) had HbA1c measured with the IA method and compared with total GHb values determined by AC and HbA1 by the CE method with the same whole-blood capillary aliquot. Glucose values were also obtained from the same blood samples. Correlations and regression analyses show excellent correspondence between the three assays. The correlation between the AC and CE methods is 0.98 (P less than 0.001) with a slope of 1.615 +/- 0.0125 and intercept of 4.00 +/- 0.20. The correlation between the IA and AC methods is 0.99 (P less than 0.001) with a slope of 0.608 +/- 0.007 and intercept of 1.326 +/- 0.066. The correlation between the IA and CE methods is 0.97 (P less than 0.001), with a slope of 0.983 +/- 0.018 and intercept of 1.122 +/- 0.153. The average difference and average percentage difference between methods were also significant (P less than 0.001), reflecting the differences in GHb components measured. There was a significant correlation (P less than 0.001) between each method and glucose values (IA r = 0.72, AC r = 0.70, CE r = 0.73). Within-run precision for IA ranged from 1.7 to 3.5% and between-run precision 2.7 to 4.1%. Study results suggest that the IA method gives extremely accurate and reliable values over the clinical range of interest. The instrument is small, portable, easy to use, and provides information within 9 min for both physicians and patients.


Parents of Children With Diabetes: What Are They Worried About?

August 1992

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35 Reads

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39 Citations

The Diabetes Educator

Parental worries, specific to having a child with diabetes, have been associated with poor diabetes control. This study addressed three questions relating to this issue: Does parental worry affect the metabolic control of the child with IDDM? What specific aspects of diabetes are the most worrisome to parents? Do these concerns change with the child's age and disease duration? Parents of 93 children with IDDM were given a modified version of the Diabetes Quality of Life measure to evaluate diabetes-specific worries. No correlation was found between parental worry and the child's metabolic control. Parents of younger children expressed the largest amount of worry, yet the kinds of things that parents were most concerned about were the same, regardless of age or duration of the child's disease.

Citations (4)


... Indiana University School of Medicine research staff measured body weight, systolic blood pressure (SBP), A1C, total cholesterol, and HDL cholesterol at baseline and at 4 -6 and 12-14 months after enrollment. A One-Touch Ultra handheld glucose meter was used to determine the whole-blood glucose concentration (6), and A1C was assessed from a finger-stick capillary blood sample using a DCA 2000 analyzer (7,8). Total and HDL cholesterol were measured from capillary blood using an LDX lipid analyzer (9,10). ...

Reference:

Influence of Patient-Centered Decision Making on Sustained Weight Loss and Risk Reduction Following Lifestyle Intervention Efforts in Rural Pennsylvania
Immediate HbA1c Results: Performance of new HbA1c system in pediatric outpatient population

Diabetes Care

... For parents, measurement tools that evaluate the effect of the disease on family life, evaluate the cooperation of the child and the parent, and evaluate family support have been developed for families with a child with type 1 diabetes [10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17]. There is a limited number of studies in which measurement tools evaluating the quality of life of parents with children with type 1 diabetes have been developed [18][19][20][21]. However, some scales were found to be specific to limited sample sizes [18][19][20] and specific age groups [18][19][20][21]. ...

Parents of Children With Diabetes: What Are They Worried About?
  • Citing Article
  • August 1992

The Diabetes Educator

... 22 In 1995, Marero et al. evaluated various biochemical, patient, and HCW-related outcomes in the Computer-linked Outpatient Clinic (CLOC) study. 23 Although there was no significant difference in metabolic control, quality of life, or ER visits, a significant decrease in the time required for consultation was observed. However, in this study, the experimental group was managed by nurses, while physicians managed the control group. ...

Using Telecommunication Technology to Manage Children with Diabetes: The Computer-Linked Outpatient Clinic (CLOC) Study

The Diabetes Educator

... While to some degree this fear is adaptive, it may disrupt daily activities, such as sleep and exercise. It can also impair optimal diabetes management and quality of life through obsessive self-monitoring, dependence on others, frustration, and behavior that tend to keep blood glucose levels high [5][6][7][8]. FoH has been recorded in family members of both pediatric and adult patients with T1DM, and, as may be expected, distressing past experiences of hypoglycemia that involved either loss of consciousness or any hypoglycemic-related traumatic event are often associated with even higher levels of fear [6,9,10]. ...

Fear of Hypoglycemia in the Parents of Children and Adolescents With Diabetes: Maladaptive or Healthy Response?
  • Citing Article
  • May 1997

The Diabetes Educator