Emotional problems
Tilburg University, Dibeter Blaak, 6 3011 TA, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
t.l.a.leendertse@tilburguniversity.edu
ADHD, Adolescents (13-17 yrs), Anxiety, Cognitive behavioral therapy, Communication in medical settings, Coping, Depression, Diabetes related distress, Family therapy, Fear of hypoglycemia, Fear of injecting / self-testing, Health cognitions / Illness perceptions, Health status, Hypoglycemia unawareness, Insulin injection, Insulin pump therapy, Motivation, Parents of children with diabetes, People with mental illness, Personality, Pre-schoolers (4-6 yrs), Psychological insulin resistance, Psychotherapy, Quality of care, Quality of life, Quantitative research, Resilience, Satisfaction with care, School-aged children (4-12 yrs), Stress in general, Stress management, Type 1 diabetes
Van der boechorststraat 7, 1081BT, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
31204448352
m.eilander@vumc.nl
Collecting, analyzing and reporting on data. Qualitative and quantitative research on the psychosocial development of youth with type 1 diabetes.
Adolescents (13-17 yrs), Blood glucose monitoring, Cognitive behavioral therapy, Communication in medical settings, Coping, Depression, Diabetes education, Eating problems, Family therapy, Motivation, Parents of children with diabetes, Personality, Positive psychology, Qualitative research, Quality of care, Quality of life, Quantitative research, Relation or family problems, Resilience, School-aged children (4-12 yrs), Screening, Stress in general, Type 1 diabetes, Young adults (18-39 yrs)
Van der Boechorststraat 7 (room G-417) 1081BT, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
+3120 444 8352
t.wieringa@vumc.nl
Researching the development in PROs after initiation of insulin glargine-300, decision aids for implementation of Shared Decision Making in chronic care and develop a talking and diagnostic tool for diabetes distress in type 2 diabetic patients. My PhD-project is called “Optimizing Patient-relevant outcomes with Toujeo (insulin glargine 300 U/ml) IN routine diabetes care” (OPTIN-D).
Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health
McGill University
Purvis Hall
1020 Pine Avenue W
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
H3A 1A2
1-514-442-1304
eva.graham@mail.mcgill.ca
PhD Student
The Australian Centre for Behavioural Research in Diabetes
570 Elizabeth Street
Melbourne 3000
Victoria
AUSTRALIA
+61 (0)3 8648 1850
jspeight@acbrd.org.au
Development of measurement tools, Diabetes related distress, Fear of hypoglycemia, Health care, Health economics, Health promotion, Hypoglycemia unawareness, Intervention, Meta-analyses / systematic reviews, Neuropsychological problems (related to hypo), New technologies, Psychological adjustment / Quality of life, Psychological insulin resistance, Qualitative research, Quantitative research, Self-management / lifestyle, Social bias / prejudice, Special groups, Survey research, Type 1 diabetes, Type 2 diabetes
Adolescents (13-17 yrs), Adults (≥18 yrs), Anxiety, Children (4-17yrs), Community interventions, Coping, Couple therapy, Depression and diabetes, Diabetes related distress, Diabetes self-care training, Epidemiology, Family members at risk of diabetes, Family Stress, Family therapy, Fear of hypoglycemia, Fear of injecting / self-testing, Mental Illness, Meta-analyses / systematic reviews, Motivation, Parents of children with diabetes, Partners of people with diabetes, Peer Support, Personality, Psychological insulin resistance, Qualitative research, Quality of life, Quantitative research, Relation or family problems, Satisfaction with care, Self-management / lifestyle, Stress in general, Survey research, Theoretical models, Type 1 diabetes
keith@healthoutinsights.com
Adults (≥18 yrs), Adults (40-64 yrs), Behaviour change interventions, Coping, Depression and diabetes, Diabetes related distress, Exercise, Fear of hypoglycemia, Health status, Mental Illness, Older adults (≥ 65 yrs), Other problem areas, People with diabetes complications, People with mental illness, Qualitative research, Quantitative research, Survey research, Theoretical models, Type 1 diabetes, Type 2 diabetes, Young adults (18-39 yrs)
