What are some psychological characteristics of type 1 diabetes?
June 28th, 2009 | by admin |Hi.
Are there any psychological characters of type 1 diabetes?
So far I have : Higher risk for eating disorders, depression, and dementia/
What am I missing?
Even though type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease, I guess quality of life could be decreased in some people who have it. A major diagnosis that is going to affect you for the rest of your life frequently causes depression – both at the time of diagnosis and throughout your life due to dealing with the constant monitoring and care that type 1 diabetes requires.
I recently read a nursing journal article that young females with type one diabetes are at higher risk for anorexia nervosa due to the strict adherence of a 'diabetic diet' and it discussed insulin omission with this.
I haven't heard about the dementia one though – hope you're not right there!
4 Responses to “What are some psychological characteristics of type 1 diabetes?”
By Mary Boo on Jun 28, 2009 | Reply
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?tool=QuerySuggestion&cmd=search&db=pmc&term=What%20are%20some%20psychological%20characteristics%20of%20type%201%20diabetes
References :
GOD BLESS
By moshi460 on Jun 28, 2009 | Reply
Here is a page on one of the psychological characteristics.
http://www.your-healthy-diabetic-life.com/Diabetesanddepression.html
I am a diabetic for 46 years now. Let me know if I can help you further.
Regards,
Moshi460
References :
By Sydney on Jun 28, 2009 | Reply
Well, Type 1 Diabetes is a physical disease, not a mental/emotional one like Depression, eating disorders and dementia. Being a sad or happy person won't effect you either way or raise your chances, the risk of getting Type 1 depends on genetics and possibly (its still controversial) your environment. Also, its an auto-immune disease, in case that helps.
References :
By Fireopal87 on Jun 28, 2009 | Reply
Even though type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease, I guess quality of life could be decreased in some people who have it. A major diagnosis that is going to affect you for the rest of your life frequently causes depression – both at the time of diagnosis and throughout your life due to dealing with the constant monitoring and care that type 1 diabetes requires.
I recently read a nursing journal article that young females with type one diabetes are at higher risk for anorexia nervosa due to the strict adherence of a 'diabetic diet' and it discussed insulin omission with this.
I haven't heard about the dementia one though – hope you're not right there!
References :
Type 1 for 5 years