Self-Perceived Health Status of Patients with Newly Diagnosed Diabetes in Spain: Associated Factors and Sex Differences
Pilar Vich-Pérez, Belén Taulero-Escalera, Paula Regueiro-Toribio, Isabel Prieto-Checa, Victoria García-Espinosa, Laura Villanova-Cuadra, Ignacio Sevilla-Machuca, Julia Timoner-García, Mario Martínez-Grandmontagne, Tania Abós-Pueyo, Cristina Álvarez-Hernández-Cañizares

TL;DR
This study explores how patients newly diagnosed with diabetes in Spain perceive their health, identifying factors like sex, obesity, and mental health that influence these perceptions.
Contribution
The study provides insights into sex-specific factors affecting self-perceived health in newly diagnosed diabetes patients in Spain.
Findings
25.8% of participants reported poor/fair self-perceived health, with higher rates in women.
Factors like female sex, lack of family support, and mental health issues were linked to poorer self-perceived health.
Sex-specific differences were observed, with distinct associations for women and men.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Multiple studies indicate that self-perceived health accurately reflects a person’s overall health, and that poor self-perceived health is associated with chronic diseases, the use of health services, increased health expenditure, and mortality. There is little research on this topic in people with newly diagnosed diabetes mellitus (DM). The objectives of this study were to analyse self-perceived health in adult patients with newly diagnosed DM (mostly T2DM, but also T1DM), identify associated characteristics, including a Mediterranean diet and physical activity, and examine differences by sex. Methods: This is a cross-sectional study of 796 patients. Participants were evaluated through physical examination, electronic medical records, self-perceived health assessment, lifestyle, personal and family history, and laboratory parameters. A multivariate analysis was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiabetes Management and Education · Chronic Disease Management Strategies · Cardiovascular Health and Risk Factors
