BackgroundMedical rehabilitation plays a special role in the treatment of children and adolescents with diabetes mellitus: services which are difficult to implement in an out-patient or an acute in-patient setting can be provided. The study analyzed changes over a period of 12 years.MethodsIn a monocentric, retrospective cross-sectional analysis, all (n = 2001) children and adolescents with diabetes (52% girls, age 12.6 ± 4.9 years) who were admitted to a specialist clinic for rehabilitation during the period 01/2004–12/2016 were examined.ResultsThe duration of medical rehabilitation was 27.3 ± 6.1 days. In all, 1980 of 2001 (98.9%) children and adolescents had type 1 diabetes, while 21 of 2001 (1.1%) had type 2 diabetes. Mean HbA1c was 7.87 ± 1.47%. Overall, 1897 of 2001 (95%) patients had an intensified insulin therapy, of which 633 (32%) used insulin pumps (CSII). They injected 0.86 ± 0.47?I.?U. insulin/kg body weight/day and performed 37.6 ± 11.4 blood glucose self-tests/week. The number of patients who participated in medical rehabilitation decreased: In 2016 it was 68% lower than in 2007, the year of the highest number of patients (p < 0.05). Parameters of metabolic control hardly changed. The proportion of patients with CSII increased (p < 0.05). In particular, young children used CSII more frequently (59% in <4 year olds vs 24% in 16–17 year olds, p < 0.05). Changes also occurred in cultural status: The percentage of patients from German families decreased (p < 0.05); the proportion of patients from mixed-cultural families increased (p < 0.05). The number of patients living together with both parents also decreased (p < 0.05 for the tendency); the number of patients living with single parents increased (p < 0.05 for the tendency). In young children, HbA1c values were the lowest. From the beginning of puberty (about 10 years), HbA1c increased (8.5 ± 1.9% in 16–17 year olds). There were no correlations/associations between metabolic control and the incidences of hypoglycemia/ketoacidoses.ConclusionsThere has been a change in medical rehabilitation: The number of patients has decreased, the proportion of patients using CSII has increased, the number of patients living with single parents and the percentage of patients from a culturally mixed families has also increased. Thus, there are new challenges in medical rehabilitation. |