Abstract

Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) undermines health and quality of life (QoL). This cross-sectional study surveyed 138 consenting T2DM patients from North-Eastern Romania with regard to their satisfaction with treatment, diabetes-related impact on QoL, and general health. The Romanian versions of Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire (DTSQ), Audit of Diabetes Dependent Quality of Life (ADDQoL-19), and 36-Item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) questionnaires were used. Self-reports were analyzed in conjunction with clinical and metabolic profiling. The patients were 57.86 ± 8.82 years old, 49.3% men, treated with oral glucose-lowering drugs, presenting with inadequate glycemic control but without cardiovascular manifestations. The mean DTSQ and ADDQoL scores were 25.46 ± 0.61 and −2.22 ± 1.2, respectively. Freedom to eat, holidays, journeys, leisure, physical health, sex life, freedom to drink, and feelings about the future scored below average. The mean SF-36 physical and mental health scores were 47.78 ± 1.03 and 50.44 ± 1.38, respectively. The mean SF-6D score was 0.59 ± 0.04 (generated retrospectively using SF-36 data). Negative associations were significant between ADDQoL, age (r = −0.16), and body mass index (r = −0.23), p < 0.01. Overall scores did not correlate with diabetes duration (except DTSQ, r = −1.18, p = 0.02) or HbA1c. The results confirm other researchers’ findings in Europe and nearby countries. Our patients seemed satisfied with treatment despite glycemic imbalance and viewed diabetes as a burden on QoL and especially freedom to eat.

Highlights

  • Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.Type 2 diabetes has become an international public health emergency and one of the great challenges of our time due to its prevalence and complexity

  • Of all the diabetic patients presenting at the diabetes center during the specified period, 138 met the inclusion criteria for this study

  • Regarding the patients’ satisfaction with their treatment, we found that patients with a longer history of diabetes, higher body mass index (BMI), and/or polyneuropathy were less satisfied

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Summary

Introduction

Type 2 diabetes has become an international public health emergency and one of the great challenges of our time due to its prevalence and complexity. It is currently the most common chronic metabolic disorder worldwide: a staggering ~463 million adults of all ages are suffering from diabetes, according to the latest reports by the International Diabetes. By 2030, the IDF hypothesizes that 195 million adults over the age of 65 will be diagnosed with diabetes [1]. In Romania, a nation-wide study indicated that 11.6%.

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