Polonsky W H, Anderson B J, Lohrer P A, Aponte J E, Jacobson A M, Cole C F
Joslin Diabetes Center, Boston, Massachusetts.
Diabetes Care. 1994 Oct;17(10):1178-85. doi: 10.2337/diacare.17.10.1178.
To describe the extent of intentional insulin omission in an outpatient population of women with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and examine its relationship to disordered eating, attitudes toward diabetes, other psychosocial factors, long-term complications, and glycemic control.
Before their routinely scheduled clinic appointments, female IDDM patients who were 13-60 years of age completed a self-report survey (final n = 341). The survey included standardized questionnaires assessing disordered eating attitudes and behaviors, psychological functioning (general distress, diabetes-specific distress, and hypoglycemic fear), attitudes toward diabetes, and self-care behaviors. All subjects were assessed for glycosylated hemoglobin within 30 days of survey completion. Long-term complications were determined through chart review.
Approximately 31% of the subject sample, representing women of all ages, reported intentional insulin omission, but only 8.8% reported frequent omission. Compared with non-omitters, omitters reported more disordered eating, greater psychological distress (general and diabetes-specific), more hypoglycemic fear, poorer regimen adherence, and greater fears concerning improved diabetes management (which may lead to weight gain). Omitters evidenced poorer glycemic control, more diabetes-related hospitalizations, and higher rates of retinopathy and neuropathy. Multivariate examination revealed only two variables that independently predicted omission: diabetes-specific distress and fear of improved glycemic control ("because I will gain weight"). Of the omitters, approximately half reported omitting insulin for weight-management purposes (weight-related omitters). These subjects evidenced significantly greater psychological distress, poorer regimen adherence (including more frequent omission), poorer glycemic control, and higher rates of complications than did non-weight-related omitters as well as non-omitters. Non-weight-related omitters tended to fall between weight-related omitters and non-omitters on most measures of psychological functioning, adherence, and glycemic control.
These findings suggest that insulin omission is common, that it is not limited to younger women, and that the medical consequences of omission, especially frequent omission, may be severe. Although a strong association between omission and disordered eating was observed, these data suggest that this link may be complicated by important diabetes-specific factors. Patients preoccupied with eating and weight concerns may also become emotionally overwhelmed by diabetes and/or fearful of normoglycemia (and the associated weight-related consequences), thus reinforcing the desire to omit insulin and maintain elevated blood glucose levels.
描述胰岛素依赖型糖尿病(IDDM)女性门诊患者故意不注射胰岛素的程度,并研究其与饮食失调、对糖尿病的态度、其他心理社会因素、长期并发症及血糖控制之间的关系。
在按常规安排的门诊预约前,13至60岁的女性IDDM患者完成了一项自我报告调查(最终n = 341)。该调查包括评估饮食失调态度和行为、心理功能(一般困扰、糖尿病特异性困扰和低血糖恐惧)、对糖尿病的态度以及自我护理行为的标准化问卷。所有受试者在调查完成后30天内接受糖化血红蛋白评估。通过查阅病历确定长期并发症情况。
约31%的受试者样本(代表各年龄段女性)报告有故意不注射胰岛素的情况,但只有8.8%报告经常不注射。与未出现不注射情况的患者相比,不注射胰岛素的患者报告有更多的饮食失调、更严重的心理困扰(一般和糖尿病特异性)、更多的低血糖恐惧、更差的治疗方案依从性以及对改善糖尿病管理(可能导致体重增加)更大的恐惧。不注射胰岛素的患者血糖控制更差、糖尿病相关住院次数更多、视网膜病变和神经病变发生率更高。多变量分析显示只有两个变量可独立预测不注射胰岛素的情况:糖尿病特异性困扰和对改善血糖控制的恐惧(“因为我会体重增加”)。在不注射胰岛素的患者中,约一半报告为了控制体重而不注射胰岛素(与体重相关的不注射者)。与非体重相关的不注射者以及未出现不注射情况的患者相比,这些受试者在心理困扰、治疗方案依从性(包括更频繁的不注射)、血糖控制及并发症发生率方面明显更严重。在心理功能、依从性和血糖控制的大多数指标上,非体重相关的不注射者往往介于与体重相关的不注射者和未出现不注射情况的患者之间。
这些发现表明,不注射胰岛素的情况很常见,不限于年轻女性,且不注射胰岛素尤其是经常不注射的医学后果可能很严重。尽管观察到不注射胰岛素与饮食失调之间有很强的关联,但这些数据表明这种联系可能因重要的糖尿病特异性因素而变得复杂。关注饮食和体重问题的患者也可能因糖尿病在情绪上不堪重负和/或害怕血糖正常(以及相关的体重相关后果),从而强化了不注射胰岛素并维持高血糖水平的意愿。