Goddard Georgia, Oxlad Melissa, Turnbull Deborah
School of Psychology, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia.
Freemason's Centre for Men's Health and Wellbeing, Adelaide, Australia.
J Diabetes Metab Disord. 2022 Nov 15;22(1):13-34. doi: 10.1007/s40200-022-01151-8. eCollection 2023 Jun.
Insulin restriction and/or omission in Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus (T1DM) is a risky disordered eating behaviour increasingly reported in the literature. Most existing literature has focused on females with T1DM. Previous research, however, suggests disordered eating behaviours are over-represented in males with T1DM versus males without T1DM. This systematic scoping review sought to summarise the existing literature to contribute to the development of an understanding of males' misuse of insulin for weight and/or shape control.
A systematic scoping review methodology was used. We searched six electronic databases. Eligible articles were quantitative, qualitative, or mixed methods empirical studies with primary data on the restriction and/or omission of insulin for weight and/or shape control among males, written in English from database inception to December 2021.
A final sample of 56 articles was included (48 quantitative, six qualitative and two mixed methods). Where it was reported to occur, estimates of the behaviour ranged from 5 to 75% in females and 1.4% to 76% in males. In 12 studies examining sex differences, only three reported higher prevalence in females. Understandings about the behavioural context of the behaviour were hampered by lack of qualitative research (n = 4 studies).
Despite common preconceptions, this disordered eating behaviour appears to occur similarly in males and females. The findings shed light on areas for future research, including aetiology in males and the need for longitudinal and qualitative research. Clinical recommendations include being alert to the possibility of this behaviour in males with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus and the need for health professionals to use open-ended questions to explore current and past deliberate restriction and/or omission of insulin among their patients.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40200-022-01151-8.
1型糖尿病(T1DM)患者限制和/或停用胰岛素是一种有风险的饮食紊乱行为,在文献中报道日益增多。现有大多数文献聚焦于患有T1DM的女性。然而,先前的研究表明,与未患T1DM的男性相比,患T1DM的男性饮食紊乱行为更为普遍。本系统综述旨在总结现有文献,以促进对男性滥用胰岛素控制体重和/或体型的理解。
采用系统综述方法。检索了六个电子数据库。符合条件的文章为定量、定性或混合方法的实证研究,包含从数据库建立至2021年12月期间以英文撰写的关于男性为控制体重和/或体型而限制和/或停用胰岛素的原始数据。
最终纳入56篇文章样本(48篇定量研究、6篇定性研究和2篇混合方法研究)。据报道,该行为在女性中的发生率估计为5%至75%,在男性中为1.4%至76%。在12项研究性别差异的研究中,只有3项报告女性患病率更高。由于缺乏定性研究(n = 4项研究),对该行为的行为背景的理解受到阻碍。
尽管存在常见的先入之见,但这种饮食紊乱行为在男性和女性中似乎同样存在。研究结果为未来研究领域提供了启示,包括男性的病因以及纵向和定性研究的必要性。临床建议包括警惕1型糖尿病男性患者出现这种行为的可能性,以及医疗专业人员需要使用开放式问题来探究其患者当前和过去故意限制和/或停用胰岛素的情况。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s40200-022-01151-8获取的补充材料。