Insulin Omission
Cross-source consensus on Insulin Omission from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Benefits
Evidence quality
Other
Other
Highlighted claims
- Insulin omission was identified using a single self-reported question about taking less insulin than needed. — Association of eating disorders and/or insulin omission with impaired glycaemic control in persons living with type 1 diabetes: cross-sectional analysis of the French SFDT1 study
- The insulin omission question did not determine the reason for omitting insulin. — Association of eating disorders and/or insulin omission with impaired glycaemic control in persons living with type 1 diabetes: cross-sectional analysis of the French SFDT1 study
- Insulin omission, with or without eating disorder screening positivity, was associated with worse glycaemic control in adults with type 1 diabetes. — Association of eating disorders and/or insulin omission with impaired glycaemic control in persons living with type 1 diabetes: cross-sectional analysis of the French SFDT1 study
- Insulin omission without eating disorder was associated with lower time in range in the fully adjusted model. — Association of eating disorders and/or insulin omission with impaired glycaemic control in persons living with type 1 diabetes: cross-sectional analysis of the French SFDT1 study
- Insulin omission was more common among participants with greater fear of hypoglycaemia. — Association of eating disorders and/or insulin omission with impaired glycaemic control in persons living with type 1 diabetes: cross-sectional analysis of the French SFDT1 study