Children with diabetes are at an increased risk for developing eating disorders and researchers want to know if it's their disease or treatment that's to blame.
"Diabetes treatment prescribes obsessive food behavior, such as carbohydrate restriction," said Dr. Deborah Young-Hyman, pediatric psychologist in the Medical College of Georgia's Georgia Prevention Institute. "We want to know if those prescribed behaviors contribute to disordered eating and/or whether there are physiological mechanisms which prevent children with diabetes from controlling their eating behavior. For example, treatment with insulin makes you hungry and can cause you to gain weight."
There is some unfortunate synergy: diabetes makes it difficult to control blood glucose and disordered eating behavior does as well, Dr. Young-Hyman said.
Over the next three years, with funding from the American Diabetes Association, she and researchers at Emory and Harvard universities will study 90 children age 10-17 newly-diagnosed with diabetes or transitioning to an insulin pump. They will monitor treatment patterns, weight, psychological adjustment and attitudes about weight and eating. They'll also look at changes in eating patterns and blood sugar levels in response to insulin.
Children and their parents will answer computer-based questionnaires about eating behaviors and psychological adjustment - in the context of their disease and its treatment.
These include questions about parental attitudes, family factors, personality of the child and parents and perceived societal attitudes.
"As they are diagnosed and are adjusting to diabetes treatment, children are already dealing with all sorts of issues that put them at an increased risk for eating disorders. The psychological issues that come with the diagnosis can add to that risk," she said. "There is also the existing drive for thinness that exists in our society, dealing with the diagnosis and management of a long-term illness and the psychological adjustment that comes with that."