The relationship of disordered eating habits and attitudes to clinical outcome in young adult females with Type 1 diabetes
The relationship of disordered eating habits and attitudes to clinical outcome in young adult females with Type 1 diabetes
OBJECTIVE—To describe the clinical outcomes of adolescent and young adult female subjects with type 1 diabetes in relation to the disturbance of eating habits and attitudes over 8–12 years.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—Patients were recruited from the registers of pediatric and young adult diabetes clinics (including nonattenders) and interviewed in the community. A total of 87 patients were assessed at baseline (aged 11–25 years), and 63 (72%) were reinterviewed after 8–12 years (aged 20–38 years). Eating habits and attitudes were assessed by a semistructured research diagnostic interview (Eating Disorder Examination).
RESULTS—Clinical eating disorders ascertained from the interview and/or case note review at baseline or follow-up were found in 13 subjects (14.9% [95% CI 8.2–24.2]), and an additional 7 subjects had evidence of bingeing or purging, bringing the total affected to 26%. Insulin misuse for weight control was reported by 31 (35.6% [25.7–46.6]) subjects. Overall outcome was poor; serious microvascular complications were common and mortality was high. There were significant relationships between disordered eating habits, insulin misuse, and microvascular complications.
CONCLUSIONS—Although the cross-sectional prevalence of clinical eating disorders in young women with diabetes is modest, the cumulative incidence of eating problems continues to increase after young adulthood, and this is strongly associated with poor physical health outcomes. The combination of an eating disorder and diabetes puts patients at high risk of mortality and morbidity. Better methods of detection and management are needed.
84-88
Peveler, Robert C.
93198224-78d9-4c1f-9c07-fdecfa69cf96
Bryden, Kathryn S.
72cc8e43-2c4d-475c-8f7d-4e55480fedb3
Neil, H. Andrew W.
ded0352b-edc2-499f-a8b9-51f82489f985
Fairburn, Christopher G.
55ec312c-c25b-4e84-a1ee-5b0bdad5cf68
Mayou, Richard A.
04c867a3-634e-4412-b7f5-95bbe793e064
Dunger, David B.
5b4c17b6-7f65-424f-9d1d-17c4331a4b9c
Turner, Hannah M.
8e5756b2-c6ad-461e-a0b8-6f653cc22750
2005
Peveler, Robert C.
93198224-78d9-4c1f-9c07-fdecfa69cf96
Bryden, Kathryn S.
72cc8e43-2c4d-475c-8f7d-4e55480fedb3
Neil, H. Andrew W.
ded0352b-edc2-499f-a8b9-51f82489f985
Fairburn, Christopher G.
55ec312c-c25b-4e84-a1ee-5b0bdad5cf68
Mayou, Richard A.
04c867a3-634e-4412-b7f5-95bbe793e064
Dunger, David B.
5b4c17b6-7f65-424f-9d1d-17c4331a4b9c
Turner, Hannah M.
8e5756b2-c6ad-461e-a0b8-6f653cc22750
Peveler, Robert C., Bryden, Kathryn S., Neil, H. Andrew W., Fairburn, Christopher G., Mayou, Richard A., Dunger, David B. and Turner, Hannah M.
(2005)
The relationship of disordered eating habits and attitudes to clinical outcome in young adult females with Type 1 diabetes.
Diabetes Care, 28 (1), .
(doi:10.2337/diacare.28.1.84).
Abstract
OBJECTIVE—To describe the clinical outcomes of adolescent and young adult female subjects with type 1 diabetes in relation to the disturbance of eating habits and attitudes over 8–12 years.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—Patients were recruited from the registers of pediatric and young adult diabetes clinics (including nonattenders) and interviewed in the community. A total of 87 patients were assessed at baseline (aged 11–25 years), and 63 (72%) were reinterviewed after 8–12 years (aged 20–38 years). Eating habits and attitudes were assessed by a semistructured research diagnostic interview (Eating Disorder Examination).
RESULTS—Clinical eating disorders ascertained from the interview and/or case note review at baseline or follow-up were found in 13 subjects (14.9% [95% CI 8.2–24.2]), and an additional 7 subjects had evidence of bingeing or purging, bringing the total affected to 26%. Insulin misuse for weight control was reported by 31 (35.6% [25.7–46.6]) subjects. Overall outcome was poor; serious microvascular complications were common and mortality was high. There were significant relationships between disordered eating habits, insulin misuse, and microvascular complications.
CONCLUSIONS—Although the cross-sectional prevalence of clinical eating disorders in young women with diabetes is modest, the cumulative incidence of eating problems continues to increase after young adulthood, and this is strongly associated with poor physical health outcomes. The combination of an eating disorder and diabetes puts patients at high risk of mortality and morbidity. Better methods of detection and management are needed.
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Published date: 2005
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Local EPrints ID: 40649
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/40649
ISSN: 1935-5548
PURE UUID: 4f764ae4-ee7a-4949-9274-1bc984da33a2
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Date deposited: 07 Jul 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:38
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Contributors
Author:
Kathryn S. Bryden
Author:
H. Andrew W. Neil
Author:
Christopher G. Fairburn
Author:
Richard A. Mayou
Author:
David B. Dunger
Author:
Hannah M. Turner
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