Department of Epidemiology and Public Health Medicine, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.
J Clin Nurs. 2013 Jul;22(13-14):2030-8. doi: 10.1111/jocn.12231.
To examine the weight loss concerns of young adults with type 1 diabetes.
Eating disorders are prevalent in young women with type 1 diabetes.
Qualitative.
Interviews with 35 young adults (23-30 years of age) with type 1 diabetes and 13 healthcare professionals.
Most female interviewees were concerned about the difficulties of losing weight when having diabetes. Six female interviewees developed severe eating disturbances when they were younger. These women initially regarded their disturbed eating behaviour positively and engaged in weight loss activities intermittently. However, over time, they lost control of their behaviour, and it came to dominate their lives. Family conflict often intensified disordered eating behaviours. Eventually all of these women managed to transition away from their behaviour, although this process took, for some of them, several years. Several of them (now in their early to late twenties), however, continued to struggle with weight loss impulses. Healthcare professionals felt that eating- and weight-related issues often went undiagnosed and undocumented in young adult women with type 1 diabetes.
Many young women with type 1 diabetes are worried about their weight, but will not engage in risky weight loss activities because of concerns about their health. A minority of young adult women will develop more severe eating-related disturbances. These eating disturbances may last a significant amount of time before clinicians become aware of them. These women may also experience disordered weight loss impulses for sometime after clinical interventions.
Clinicians should screen young adult women with type 1 diabetes for eating disorders and monitor young adult women who have developed eating disorders over the longer term. There may be a need to provide asymptomatic young women with diabetes with information about the potential risks of insulin omission.
探讨 1 型糖尿病青年的体重减轻问题。
饮食障碍在患有 1 型糖尿病的年轻女性中很常见。
定性研究。
对 35 名 1 型糖尿病的年轻成年人(23-30 岁)和 13 名医疗保健专业人员进行了访谈。
大多数女性受访者对患有糖尿病时减肥的困难感到担忧。六名年轻女性出现了严重的饮食紊乱。这些女性最初对自己的饮食紊乱行为持积极态度,并间歇性地参与减肥活动。然而,随着时间的推移,她们失去了对行为的控制,饮食行为开始主导她们的生活。家庭冲突常常加剧了饮食障碍行为。最终,所有这些女性都成功地摆脱了这种行为,尽管其中一些人花了好几年时间。然而,她们中的一些人(现在二十多岁到三十多岁)仍然在与减肥冲动作斗争。医疗保健专业人员认为,1 型糖尿病的年轻成年女性中,与饮食和体重相关的问题常常未被诊断和记录。
许多 1 型糖尿病的年轻女性担心自己的体重,但由于担心健康问题,不会从事有风险的减肥活动。少数年轻成年女性会出现更严重的与饮食相关的障碍。这些饮食障碍可能会持续很长一段时间,直到临床医生注意到。这些女性在临床干预后可能还会经历一段时间的紊乱减肥冲动。
临床医生应筛查 1 型糖尿病的年轻成年女性是否存在饮食障碍,并对长期患有饮食障碍的年轻成年女性进行监测。可能需要向无症状的糖尿病年轻女性提供有关胰岛素遗漏潜在风险的信息。