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Journal Article

Citation

Brož J, Brabec M, Janíčková Žďárská D, Fedáková Z, Hoskovcová L, You JY, Doničová V, Hlaďo P, Rahelić D, Kvapil M, Polák J. Patient Prefer. Adherence 2015; 9: 1367-1370.

Affiliation

Center for Research on Diabetes, Metabolism and Nutrition, Second Department of Internal Medicine, Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Dove Press)

DOI

10.2147/PPA.S87393

PMID

26491264

PMCID

PMC4599050

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Under current European Union legislation, two severe hypoglycemic events within 12 months is grounds for driving license withdrawal. The aim of the study reported here was to determine whether fear of such a withdrawal could lead to patients concealing severe hypoglycemia from physicians, which could negatively impact further treatment decisions.

METHODS: A total of 663 patients with insulin-treated diabetes were anonymously surveyed about whether they would conceal severe hypoglycemic events from their physicians, if revealing them could result in driving license withdrawal. This investigation utilized an adapted and expanded questionnaire by Graveling et al.

RESULTS: Of all diabetic patients surveyed, 26.17% would most likely not report hypoglycemia, and 25.86% were undecided. In a group of patients with type 1 diabetes, 31.83% would likely not report hypoglycemic events, and 25.06% were undecided. The patients least likely to report severe hypoglycemic events were those who indicated that vehicles were partly essential for work, and who also had more than two hypoglycemic events monthly.

CONCLUSION: A considerable percentage of diabetic patients would likely conceal severe hypoglycemic events from their physicians due to fear of driving license withdrawal. Patient failure to report severe hypoglycemic events can potentially lead to physicians being misinformed regarding the patient's condition, which could lead to inadequate monitoring and treatment.


Language: en

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