Assessment of parental awareness of diabetic ketoacidosis in children with diabetes: a cross-sectional study at a tertiary referral center in Iran.
Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is a life-threatening complication of type 1 diabetes (T1DM) and a leading cause of pediatric mortality. Prevention depends on caregivers' ability to recognize early signs and initiate proper sick-day management. However, data on DKA awareness among Iranian parents remains limited. This study aimed to evaluate both subjective self-ratings and objective calculated knowledge regarding DKA among parents of children with T1DM.
This cross-sectional study was conducted among 217 parents at a pediatric diabetes clinic in Shiraz, Iran. A validated questionnaire (Cronbach's alpha = 0.8), adapted through forward-backward translation, assessed demographics, disease duration, HbA1c, and DKA knowledge. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, Kruskal-Wallis tests, and Spearman's correlations (rs) to identify predictors of awareness.
Most participants were mothers (80.6%), and 38.7% reported DKA as the initial presentation at diagnosis. Subjective knowledge scores (0-10) were 1.86 ± 3.07 for mothers and 0.89 ± 2.16 for fathers (P = 0.06). Mothers demonstrated significantly higher calculated objective awareness than fathers (P = 0.007). Higher objective knowledge significantly correlated with higher education levels (rs=0.280, P = 0.01), longer disease duration (P = 0.01), and prior DKA admission (P = 0.02). Awareness showed no significant relationship with the child's most recent HbA1c levels (P = 0.98).
Parental DKA knowledge is critically inadequate. As DKA mortality is preventable through early detection, targeted educational interventions and accessible resources are urgently needed to empower parents and improve clinical outcomes for children with T1DM.
This cross-sectional study was conducted among 217 parents at a pediatric diabetes clinic in Shiraz, Iran. A validated questionnaire (Cronbach's alpha = 0.8), adapted through forward-backward translation, assessed demographics, disease duration, HbA1c, and DKA knowledge. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, Kruskal-Wallis tests, and Spearman's correlations (rs) to identify predictors of awareness.
Most participants were mothers (80.6%), and 38.7% reported DKA as the initial presentation at diagnosis. Subjective knowledge scores (0-10) were 1.86 ± 3.07 for mothers and 0.89 ± 2.16 for fathers (P = 0.06). Mothers demonstrated significantly higher calculated objective awareness than fathers (P = 0.007). Higher objective knowledge significantly correlated with higher education levels (rs=0.280, P = 0.01), longer disease duration (P = 0.01), and prior DKA admission (P = 0.02). Awareness showed no significant relationship with the child's most recent HbA1c levels (P = 0.98).
Parental DKA knowledge is critically inadequate. As DKA mortality is preventable through early detection, targeted educational interventions and accessible resources are urgently needed to empower parents and improve clinical outcomes for children with T1DM.
Authors
Ilkhanipoor Ilkhanipoor, Hosseini Hosseini, Barzegar Barzegar, Moravej Moravej, Salarian Salarian
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