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Release Date: Aug. 30, 2004
MENTAL DISTRESS RAISES HEART DISEASE RISK IN PATIENTS WITH DIABETES
By Ann Quigley, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Even without the burden
of psychological distress, people with diabetes are already more vulnerable
to cardiovascular
disease. Compared to those without
the disease, deaths from heart disease are more than twice as high in men with
diabetes and almost three times as high in women— making it particularly
important to reduce the impact of psychological distress, according to the
study.
“Mental health professionals need to be involved in the care of diabetic
persons,” says study author Tara W. Strine, M.P.H., an epidemiologist
in the Division of Adult and Community Health at the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention. The findings appear in the American Journal of Health Behavior.
Strine and colleagues
studied survey results from 4,241 people with diabetes, part of the Behavioral
Risk Factors
Surveillance System, a telephone survey
of U.S. adults. Nearly 13 percent of these individuals reported frequent mental
distress — defined as experiencing stress, depression or emotional problems
for 14 of the past 30 days.
Mentally distressed people with diabetes were significantly more likely than
non-distressed diabetic people to smoke (18.5 percent versus 12.7 percent),
have high cholesterol (50.8 percent versus 41.7 percent) and high blood pressure
(63.4 percent versus 54.2 percent). They were also more likely to avoid exercise
such as running, calisthenics, golf, gardening or walking (44.1 percent versus
35.4 percent).
Distressed people with diabetes were also more likely to experience four or
more of five risk factors examined, the researchers found. The most common
risk factor cluster, experienced by approximately 41 percent of this group,
was the combination of obesity, exercise avoidance, high blood pressure and
high cholesterol.
Other researchers have found that individuals with mood disorders such as
depression and anxiety have a rougher time adhering to health care regimens
due to impaired focus and reduced energy and motivation levels. Such insights
may help explain the current study findings.
“The management of diabetes is multi-faceted, complex and demanding,” Strine
says. “It depends primarily on the diabetic person’s self-care
behavior.”
Despite the association between depression and cardiovascular disease, and
despite the higher health care costs associated with the pairing of these two
disorders, only a third of depressed diabetics receive treatment for depression,
according to previous research.
The authors note that limitations of this study included its exclusion of
severely physically or mentally impaired individuals, as well as those without
telephone access. Also, while this type of study may suggest an association
between mental distress and heart disease risk factors, it cannot determine
the exact mechanism behind this association.
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FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Interviews: Contact the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion at (770)
488-5131. American Journal of Health Behavior: Visit www.ajhb.org or e-mail
eglover@hsc.wvu.edu.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Director of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
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