2012
Body Mass Index at the Time of Diagnosis of Autoimmune Type 1 Diabetes in Children
Kaminski BM, Klingensmith GJ, Beck RW, Tamborlane WV, Lee J, Hassan K, Schatz D, Kollman C, Redondo MJ, Consortium P. Body Mass Index at the Time of Diagnosis of Autoimmune Type 1 Diabetes in Children. The Journal Of Pediatrics 2012, 162: 736-740.e1. PMID: 23092524, DOI: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2012.09.017.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAutoimmune type 1 diabetesType 1 diabetesGeneral populationDiabetic ketoacidosisT1D onsetHigher BMI z-scoreHispanic race/ethnicityDisease control populationsMedian BMI percentilePediatric Diabetes ConsortiumDiagnosis of T1DPediatric diabetes centersTime of diagnosisDays of diagnosisBody mass indexSame clinical characteristicsBody mass index distributionBMI z-scoreType 2 diabetesChildren ages 2Race/ethnicityClinical characteristicsDiabetes autoantibodiesDiabetes CenterLower hemoglobin
2003
Quality of Life in School-Aged Children With Type 1 Diabetes on Intensive Treatment and Their Parents
Whittemore R, Urban AD, Tamborlane WV, Grey M. Quality of Life in School-Aged Children With Type 1 Diabetes on Intensive Treatment and Their Parents. The Science Of Diabetes Self-Management And Care 2003, 29: 847-854. PMID: 14603873, DOI: 10.1177/014572170302900514.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdaptation, PsychologicalAdultChildCritical CareCross-Sectional StudiesDepressive DisorderDiabetes Mellitus, Type 1Family HealthFemaleHumansInsulin Infusion SystemsMaleMultivariate AnalysisParentsPsychology, ChildQuality of LifeRegression AnalysisSocial SupportSurveys and QuestionnairesTreatment OutcomeConceptsType 1 diabetesQuality of lifeSchool-aged childrenIntensive treatmentMetabolic controlGood metabolic controlComplex chronic illnessDemands of treatmentCross-sectional analysisMost school-age childrenFamily psychosocial variablesChronic illnessIntensive psychosocial supportDepressive symptomsPsychosocial supportDiabetesChildren's qualityPsychosocial variablesChildrenTreatmentFamily factorsParentsSymptomsIllness