Psychosocial outcomes with the Omnipod® 5 Automated Insulin Delivery System in caregivers of very young children with type 1 diabetes
MacLeish S, Hood K, Polonsky W, Wood J, Bode B, Forlenza G, Laffel L, Buckingham B, Criego A, Schoelwer M, DeSalvo D, Sherr J, Hansen D, Conroy L, Huyett L, Vienneau T, Ly T, Group F. Psychosocial outcomes with the Omnipod® 5 Automated Insulin Delivery System in caregivers of very young children with type 1 diabetes. Diabetes Obesity And Metabolism 2024, 26: 5569-5579. PMID: 39300963, DOI: 10.1111/dom.15906.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchPsychosocial outcomesSleep qualityEvaluate psychosocial outcomesPittsburgh Sleep Quality Index total scoreWell-beingType 1 diabetesSatisfaction survey scoresYoung childrenBurden caregiversAid useOverall sleep qualityAutomated insulin deliverySystem usabilityCaregiversSurvey scoresDiabetes managementPerceived system usabilityGlycaemic outcomesTotal scoreSleep durationDelivery satisfactionGlycaemic metricsSubscalesOutcomesUnique challengesGlycemic Outcomes Persist for up to 2 Years in Very Young Children with the Omnipod® 5 Automated Insulin Delivery System
DeSalvo D, Bode B, Forlenza G, Laffel L, Buckingham B, Criego A, Schoelwer M, MacLeish S, Sherr J, Hansen D, Ly T. Glycemic Outcomes Persist for up to 2 Years in Very Young Children with the Omnipod® 5 Automated Insulin Delivery System. Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics 2024, 26: 383-393. PMID: 38277156, DOI: 10.1089/dia.2023.0506.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchType 1 diabetesExtension phaseEpisodes of diabetic ketoacidosisEpisodes of severe hypoglycemiaLong-term safetyLong-term useStandard therapyDiabetic ketoacidosisAutomated insulin deliverySevere hypoglycemiaYoung childrenConclusion:</i></b>Continuous glucose monitoring metricsExtension studyMethods:</i></b>MonthsGlycemic outcomesTarget rangeTrialsOmnipodHbA1cInsulin deliveryDelivery systemInsulin delivery systemsEpisodesSevere Hypoglycemia and Impaired Awareness of Hypoglycemia Persist in People With Type 1 Diabetes Despite Use of Diabetes Technology: Results From a Cross-sectional Survey
Sherr J, Laffel L, Liu J, Wolf W, Bispham J, Chapman K, Finan D, Titievsky L, Liu T, Hagan K, Gaglia J, Chandarana K, Bergenstal R, Pettus J. Severe Hypoglycemia and Impaired Awareness of Hypoglycemia Persist in People With Type 1 Diabetes Despite Use of Diabetes Technology: Results From a Cross-sectional Survey. Diabetes Care 2024, 47: 941-947. PMID: 38295397, PMCID: PMC11116910, DOI: 10.2337/dc23-1765.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchImpaired awareness of hypoglycemiaSevere hypoglycemic eventsType 1 diabetesGlycemic targetsContinuous glucose monitoringInsulin delivery modalityDiabetes technologyImproved treatment strategiesAwareness of hypoglycemiaImpaired awarenessU.S. RESEARCH DESIGNAdvanced diabetes technologiesProportion of participantsCross-sectional surveySubgroup analysisSevere hypoglycemiaTreatment strategiesAutomated insulin deliveryImpact of continuous glucose monitoringGlycemic metricsHypoglycemic eventsObservational studyProportion of peopleResearch designInsulin delivery