Diabetics With Mental Disorders at Increased Risk for Diabetic
Complications
(INDIANAPOLIS, IN -- December 6, 2004) -- Diabetics with
mental disorders do not have as good blood sugar control as diabetics
without mental illness and are more likely to suffer one or more diabetes
complication including loss of kidney function, loss of sensation in the
feet, and visual problems (including blindness) than diabetics without
mental illness, according to a study published in the December issue of
Medical Care.
"This study provides a solid foundation for further work into
understanding whether provider, patient or system factors can be modified to
ensure better overall care of diabetic patients with mental disorders,."
said Caroline Carney, M.D., M.Sc., associate professor of psychiatry and
medicine at the Indiana University School of Medicine and a research
scientist at the Regenstrief Institute, Inc. Dr. Carney is the senior author
of the study which looked at insurance claims data from more than 26,000
diabetic adults between the ages of 18 and 64 living in Iowa.
"Even when we controlled for utilization of healthcare services,
diabetics with mental disorders did less well at controlling their diabetes
and had more complications than diabetics who had no mental health
complaints," said Dr. Carney.
The researchers found that diabetics with mental disorders were more
likely to be young, female, and urban residents and to make greater use of
healthcare services than the diabetics without mental illness. Mental
disorders presented by the diabetics in the study include mood, adjustment,
anxiety, cognitive, psychotic,
substance abuse and
sexual disorders.
"These findings underscore the need for physicians to treat the whole
patient - not simply the mental disorders or the physical complaints," said
Dr. Carney who is both an internist and a psychiatrist.
The study was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health.
SOURCE: Indiana University
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