2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.pedn.2015.05.010
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Family Perspectives of Components of a Diabetes Transition Program

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Cited by 23 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…6 While issues related to this transitional period are due to a complex set of factors, prior studies have suggested that timing of and preparation for transfer from pediatric care, which is coordinated by the pediatric provider, has the potential to alter outcomes. [6][7][8] Although expert consensus recommendations exist for transition care specifically pertaining to YA with T1D, 9 standardized policies at the health system level in most centers in the U.S. either do not exist or are not widespread.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…6 While issues related to this transitional period are due to a complex set of factors, prior studies have suggested that timing of and preparation for transfer from pediatric care, which is coordinated by the pediatric provider, has the potential to alter outcomes. [6][7][8] Although expert consensus recommendations exist for transition care specifically pertaining to YA with T1D, 9 standardized policies at the health system level in most centers in the U.S. either do not exist or are not widespread.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Only four of the 19 tools used in the included articles were developed prior to 2014 [11,32,37,43]. Of the 15 [11,26,32,37,43,47,49,51,53,[55][56][57], and among the 48 included, articles have been utilized in Argentina [21], Brazil [19], Canada [3,15,16,23], Mexico [33], and Turkey [22]. Three tools originated in Canada [39,41,45] and have been utilized in Japan [46] and Turkey [42].…”
Section: Characteristics Of Measuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The remaining three tools originated in Taiwan [52], The Netherlands [54], and Australia [58]. Nine tools were disease-neutral [1,11,26,32,37,39,41,47,54] while 10 were disease-specific [43,45,49,[51][52][53][55][56][57][58]. Of the 19 tools, the University of North Carolina (UNC) TRxANSITION was the only tool administered to the adolescent by a healthcare provider [32]; the other 18 were self-report.…”
Section: Characteristics Of Measuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…41 Patients and parents generally report that talking with health care providers at regular clinic visits and receiving family-based supports are particularly helpful in the transition process. 46 Additionally, young adult patients have identified services that may improve the transition process, including provision of targeted referrals to adult diabetes care providers, discussion of transition services earlier in pediatric care, assistance with logistics of transfer to adult care, increasing attention to differences between pediatric and adult care, and increased opportunities to connect with other young adults with type 1 diabetes. 41,47,48 Services for transitioning patients to adult-oriented health care should continue to include parents as key aspects of the patient's support team rather than excluding them from the process.…”
Section: Patient Perspectives On Health Care Transitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, only 25% of adolescents found the written materials to be very helpful. 46 It is likely that transition services are best received when they are integrated into routine clinical care and are built upon interactions and relationships with health care providers.…”
Section: Patient Perspectives On Health Care Transitionmentioning
confidence: 99%