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Fading
Social Life May
Signal Trouble in Diabetes
Older diabetic patients who withdraw
from their normal social activities may be showing early signs
of deteriorating health, new study findings suggest.
Researchers found that among more
than 5,200 people with diabetes, age 65 and older, those who said
they had recently curtailed their leisure activities were more
likely than others to die or develop a disability over the next
two years.
None of the study participants
had any apparent disabilities at the outset, suggesting, the authors
say, that a diabetic person's withdrawal from social life may
be one of the first signs of declining health.
Disability develops over time,
lead study author Dr. Yong-Fang Kuo told Reuters Health, and this
study suggests "social disengagement" happens early in the process.
She and her colleagues at the University
of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston report the findings in the
July issue of the journal Diabetes Care.
For the study, the researcher analyzed
data from a survey of Medicare managed care patients. They focused
on results for 5,235 men and women who at the study's start reported
no problems with daily activities such as bathing, dressing and
eating, and who gave complete survey data again two years later.
As part of the survey, participants
were asked whether physical or emotional problems had caused them
to cut back on their usual social activities in the past month.
Kuo's team found that those who had curbed their activities had
a higher risk of dying or becoming disabled by the follow-up survey.
Overall, each 10-point increase
in a participant's social functioning score translated into an
18 percent lower risk of developing difficulties with daily tasks.
A similar pattern emerged for the risk of dying, according to
the report.
These relationships persisted regardless
of factors such as age, smoking habits and other health conditions
like heart disease, stroke, arthritis and depression. According
to the authors, this suggests that a drop-off in social activities
might be a "forerunner" to loss of independence and premature
death.
Kuo said older diabetic patients
and their doctors can discuss any changes in social life as a
way to catch declining health early on. These patients, she and
her colleagues conclude, should then be treated vigorously for
any modifiable physical or emotional health problems they may
have.
SOURCE: Diabetes Care, July 2004.
Reference
Source 89
July 13, 2004
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