Objective
This study investigated between-person and within-person associations among mean levels and variability in affect, diabetes self-care behaviors, and continuously monitored glucose in Latinos with type 2 diabetes.
Methods
Fifty participants (mean age=57.8 [SD=11.7] years, 74% women, mean A1c=8.3% [SD=1.5%]) wore a “blinded” continuous glucose monitor for 7 days, and they responded to twice-daily automated phone surveys regarding positive affect (PA), negative affect (NA) and self-care behaviors.
Results
Higher mean levels of NA were associated with higher mean glucose (r=.30), greater % hyperglycemia (r = .34) and greater % out of range glucose (r = .34). Higher NA variability was also related to higher mean glucose (r = .34), greater % hyperglycemia (r = .44) and greater % out-of-range glucose (r = .43). Higher PA variability was related to lower % hypoglycemia (r = −.33). Higher mean levels of self-care behaviors were related to lower glucose variability (r = −.35). Finally, higher self-care behavior variability was related to greater % hyperglycemia (r =.31) and greater % out-of-range glucose (r =−.28). In multilevel regression models, within-person increases from mean levels of self-care were associated with lower mean levels of glucose (b = −7.4, 95% CI: −12.8 to -1.9), lower % hyperglycemia (b = −.04, 95% CI: −.07 to −.01), and higher % hypoglycemia (b = .02, 95% CI: .01 to .03) in the subsequent 10-hour period.
Conclusions
Near-to-real time sampling documented associations of glucose with affect and diabetes self-care that are not detectable with traditional measures.