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Mental
Illness Hampers Diabetes Care
People with serious mental illness have higher rates of type 2
diabetes than the general public, but a new study finds that,
compared to mentally healthy people, these patients often understand
much less about their disease.
Sufferers of schizophrenia or major mood disorders were found
to have a generally poor amount of knowledge about diabetes, according
to researchers with the Sheppard Pratt Health System and the University
of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore.
Both disorders impair cognitive function and can disrupt normal
attentiveness, learning and motivations -- attributes considered
essential in the self-management of type 2 diabetes.
However, the researchers also found that diabetes knowledge can
increase in these groups if individuals are given specific instructions
about diabetes, and how to deal with it.
It is not clear why people with these mental illnesses are more
prone to develop diabetes, the researchers said, although it could
be linked to increased obesity or the use of antipsychotic medicines.
The findings appear in the September issue of the journal Psychosomatics
.
More
articles on Diabetes
The National Diabetes Information Clearinghouse has more about
diabetes
.
SOURCE: Sheppard Pratt Health System, news release, Sept. 1,
2005
Reference
Source 62
September
10, 2005
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