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Untreated substance use disorder affects glycemic control: Results in patients with type 2 diabetes served within a network of community-based healthcare centers in Florida
Patients with diabetes and comorbid substance use disorders (SUD) experience poor diabetes management, increased medical complications and mortality. However, research has documented that patients engaged in substance abuse treatment have better management of their comorbid conditions. The current study examines diabetes management among patients with type 2 diabetes, with and without comorbid SUD, receiving care at Florida-based Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC) of Health Choice Network (HCN).
A retrospective analysis was conducted using deidentified electronic health records of 37,452 patients with type 2 diabetes who received care at a HCN site in Florida between 2016 and 2019. A longitudinal logistic regression analysis examined the impact of SUD diagnosis on achievement of diabetes management [HbA1c < 7.0% (53 mmol/mol)] over time. A secondary analysis evaluated, within those with an SUD diagnosis, the likelihood of HbA1c control between those with and without SUD treatment.
The longitudinal assessment of the relationship between SUD status and HbA1c control revealed that those with SUD (N = 6,878, 18.4%) were less likely to control HbA1c over time (OR = 0.56; 95% CI = 0.49-0.63). Among those with SUD, patients engaged in SUD treatment were more likely to control HbA1c (OR = 5.91; 95% CI = 5.05-6.91).
Findings highlight that untreated SUD could adversely affect diabetes control and sheds light on the opportunity to enhance care delivery for patients with diabetes and co-occurring SUD
From Attitudes to Social Representations in Endangered Language Research: Towards an Interactional Framework
International audienceMany language endangerment researchers maintain that language is fundamentally linked to an identifiable ethnic community and identity. However, there is a dearth of in-depth sociolinguistic studies on speakers' own views of these links. Studying speakers' views is essential to understanding why a language is endangered. In this paper, I present a case study in South India focusing on speakers of an endangered language and their views, or social representations, of their linguistic and social reality. Through the use of discursive and conversation analysis techniques, I examine the way in which the participants in an interview jointly construct and position themselves in relation to essentialising social representations similar to those employed by many endangered language researchers. Speakers in the extract discussed use discursive strategies mainly to distance themselves from essentialising views of their linguistic and social reality, though the analysis also shows the dynamic and co-constructed nature of the social representations