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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Quality of life tool tested for dogs with diabetes mellitus

By Niessen, S J M et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2012·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of a quality-of-life tool for dogs with diabetes mellitus.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study involving 101 owners of insulin-treated diabetic dogs found that managing diabetes can significantly affect both the dogs' and their owners' quality of life. Many owners reported feelings of worry about their dog's health, difficulties in leaving their dog with others, and concerns about costs and future care. The researchers developed a tool called DIAQoL-pet to measure these impacts, which showed reliable results. This tool can help veterinarians understand the emotional and social challenges faced by pet owners dealing with their dog's diabetes.

People also search for: dog diabetes quality of life · insulin-treated dog care · managing diabetes in dogs

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Diabetes mellitus (DM) management primarily focuses on improvement in blood glucose concentrations and clinical signs. A tool to assess the psychological and social impact of DM and its treatment on quality of life (QoL) previously has only been validated for feline DM. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: To validate a diabetic pet and owner-centered individualized measure of impact of DM (DIAQoL-pet) for diabetic dogs and their owners. ANIMALS/SUBJECTS: A total of 101 owners of insulin-treated diabetic dogs were recruited to complete the DIAQoL-pet. METHODS: Discussions and pilot surveys with clinicians and owners of diabetic pets led to the design of 29 specific DM-associated QoL questions. Each item was scored according to impact frequency and perceived importance. An Item-Weighted-Impact-Score (IWIS) for each item was calculated, as was an Average-Weighted-Impact-Score (AWIS) by averaging all IWISs. Principal component analysis and Cronbach's α calculation assessed the measure's reliability. RESULTS: The DIAQoL-pet showed high reliability (Communalities ≥0.5; Cronbach's α 0.85). The AWIS was -2.74 ± 1.7 (mean ± SD). Areas reported as most negatively impacting QoL included: "worry" (IWIS ± SD: -5.92 ± 4.3), "difficulties leaving dog with friends or family" (-5.68 ± 5.1), "worry vision" (-5.58 ± 4.6), "boarding difficulties" (-5.18 ± 5.2), "worry hypoglycemia" (-4.95 ± 4.3), "social life" (-4.82 ± 4.4), "costs" (-4.11 ± 4.7), and "future care"(-4.07 ± 4.6). Eighty-four percent of owners reported negative impact of DM on QoL. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: The DIAQoL-pet proved robust when used by owners of insulin-treated diabetic dogs and identified specific areas most negatively impacting dogs' and their owners' QoL. This tool could be used as an additional assessment parameter in clinical and research settings.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22646241/