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Psychological Barriers To Good Glycaemic Control

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Title: Psychological Barriers To Good Glycaemic Control


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Diabetes A Psychological Perspective
  • Prof. Frank J. Snoek
  • Medical Psychology
  • Diabetes Psychology Research Group
  • VU University Medical Centre
  • Amsterdam - The Netherlands

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Contents
  • Well-being and Self-management
  • Coping issues
  • Barriers to diabetes self-regulation
  • Practice Implications

5
Psychological Well-being in Diabetes?
  • Well-being is an important outcome in its self
    (SVD, 1995)
  • Poor Well-being impedes diabetes self-care

6
Adaptational Tasks in Chronic Illness (Coping)
  • Maintain emotional balance after diagnosis (loss
    of health, self-esteem)
  • Cope with physical complaints and functional
    limitations
  • Maintain social roles, cope with negative
    labelling (stigma)
  • Cope with medical procedures and
    stresses/uncertainties
  • Communicate with and maintain relationships with
    HCPs

7
Behavioral Diabetes Model
Well -Being
Medical Outcomes
Self-care
8
What makes Self-care Difficult to Maintain
  • 365 days-a-year proposition
  • Pro-active coping required
  • Not pleasant, painful (injections, SMBG)
  • Interferes with daily life/flexibility
  • Often lack of direct positive feed-back
  • Adherence does not always pay off
  • Long-term goals immediate frustration
  • Polonsky WH, 1999 Rubin,1992

9
Diabetes treatment A balancing act
Prevent Hypos
Prevent Hypers
NOW
MY FUTURE
10
Barriers to Effective Coping with Diabetes
  • Intra-individual (cognitive, emotional,
    behavioral)
  • Inter-personal (family/martital conflict, lack of
    social support miscarried helping/ diabetes
    police)
  • Environmental/contextual (access health services,
    care climate)

11
Two levels of psychological problems
  • Normal adaptation/coping problems
  • Psychological/psychiatric disorders (ICD-10,
    DSM-IV)

12
Top 3 items diabetes-specific emotional
distress(PAID-data Polonsky et al., 1995 Welch
et al, 1997 Snoek et al, 2000)
  • Worries about the future and complications
  • Feeling worried or guilty when off track with
    the diabetes regimen
  • Not knowing if your mood or feelings are related
    to your diabetes

13
Adaptational Breakdown Diabetes Burn-out
Negative experiences
Negative attitudes
Poor Self- care
Poor control
Hoover JW, 1988 Polonsky WH, 1999 Seligman,
1997 Snoek, 2000.
Hoover JW, 1988
14
Psychological/Psychiatric Disorders in Diabetes
  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Eating Disorders

15
Prevalence of Depression in DiabetesMeta-analysis
of 39 Studies
  • Depression prevalence is
  • Higher in women vs. men
  • Higher in clinic vs. community samples
  • Higher when assessed via self-report vs.
    diagnostic methods
  • Similar in patients with type 1 vs. type 2
    diabetes

Nondepressed 69
Significant Symptoms 31.0
11 Major Depression
Anderson et al., 2001
16
Odds and Prevalence of Depression in 18
Controlled Studies
2.0 (1.8-2.2)
OR (95 CI)
The odds of depression were doubled in diabetics
compared to controls.
Depression prevalence ()
Nondiabetics
Diabetics
Anderson et al., 2001
17
Adverse effects of Depression
  • Suffering, reduced QoL
  • Associated with hyperglycemia (Lustman et al.,
    2000) and complications (De Groot et., 2001)
  • Increased health care use and costs (Black, 1999
    Ciechanowski et al., 2000)

18
Anxiety
  • General Anxiety Disorder (GAD) and Phobias
    (prevalence? Popkin et al., 1988 Petrak et al.,
    2003)
  • Self-injecting/monitoring phobia (Snoek et al.,
    1994 Mollema et al., 2000).
  • Fear of Hypoglycaemia (Gonder-Frederick et al.,
    1997 Marrero et al., 1997).
  • Fear of Complications (Karlson,Agardh,1997
    Zettler et al., 1995)

19
Intra-personal BarriersEating Disorders AN, BN,
ED-NOS (bingeing)
  • Common among young diabetic girls (10-30) (Jones
    et al., 2000)
  • Eating disorders (Binge Eating) in type 2 ?
    (Kenardy et al., 2000)
  • Associated with poor metabolic control
  • (insulin omission) and
  • Earlier onset of complications (Rydall et al.,
    1997)
  • Increased mortality (Nielsen et al., 2002)

20
Summary
  • Psychological and behavioral factors play key
    role in achieving and maintaining optimal control
    (Glasgow et al, 1999 Snoek, 2000)
  • Psychosocial problems are prevalent and deserve
    attention (Cox yet et al., 1992 Rubin,Peyrot,
    1996 Snoek, 2000)
  • The patients emotional well-being needs to be
    monitored in diabetes care
  • (St Vincent Declaration, 1995)

21
How to address psychosocial issues?
  • Patient-centred care (communication, evaluation
    of patient-reported outcomes)
  • Team approach Multidisciplinary, inlcuding
    behavioral scientist
  • Coping-oriented, self-management education and
    counseling

22
A new paradigm
  • Self-management helps people with long-term
    medical condition to take responsibility for
    their own lives. It addresses the whole person
    and not just their illness or disability.
  • It is about people with chronic disease
    becoming able to gain greater independence and
    live healthy, confident lives
  • Expert Patients Stakeholder Conference, 2000
    (http//www.doh.gov.uk/healthinequalities)

23
More Information.
  • Anderson Rubin (eds). Practical Psychology for
    diabetes clinicians, ADA, 1996.
  • Snoek Skinner (eds). Psychology in diabetes
    care, Wiley, 2000.
  • Psychosocial Aspects of Diabetes study group
    (EASD) www.emgo.nl/psad
  • fj.snoek_at_vumc.nl
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