The effects of psychiatric disorders and symptoms on quality of life in patients with Type I and Type II diabetes mellitus
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Quality of Life Research
- Vol. 6 (1) , 11-20
- https://doi.org/10.1023/a:1026487509852
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the influence of psychiatric symptoms and illness status on the health-related quality of life (HRQOL) of outpatients with Type I and Type II diabetes mellitus. Using a two-stage design, all patients were assessed by two measures of quality of life (Diabetes Quality of Life Measure; Medical Outcome Study Health Survey) and a psychiatric symptoms checklist (SCL-90-R). Patients scoring 63 or greater on the global severity index of the SCL-90-R and 30% below this cutoff were then evaluated using the Structured Clinical Interview for the DSM-III-R (SCID). Quality of life in both Type I and Type II diabetes was influenced by the level of current psychiatric symptoms and presence of co-morbid psychiatric disorder, after controlling for number of diabetic complications (e.g. effect of lifetime psychiatric illness on diabetes-related HRQOL; F=46.8; df=3, 135; p < 0.005). These effects were found consistently across specific domains. Both recent and past psychiatric disorders influenced HRQOL. Separate analyses comparing patients with and without depression showed similar effects. No interaction effects between diabetes type, number of complications, and psychiatric status were found in analyses. Finally, increased severity of psychiatric symptoms was correlated with decreased HRQOL in patients without current, recent, or past psychiatric diagnosis. This study shows the consistent, independent contribution of psychiatric symptoms and illness to the HRQOL of patients with a co-existing medical illness. Thus, psychiatric interventions addressing common conditions, such as depression, could improve the HRQOL of patients without changing medical status.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Evaluation of Two Measures of Quality of Life in Patients With Type I and Type II DiabetesDiabetes Care, 1994
- The MOS 36-ltem Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36): III. Tests of Data Quality, Scaling Assumptions, and Reliability Across Diverse Patient GroupsMedical Care, 1994
- Disease-specific Versus Generic Measurement of Health-related Quality of Life in Insulin-dependent Diabetic PatientsMedical Care, 1993
- The MOS 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36)Medical Care, 1993
- Quality of Life in Young Adults with Type 1 Diabetes in Relation to Demographic and Disease VariablesDiabetic Medicine, 1992
- The Validity and Relative Precision of MOS Short-, and Long- Form Health Status Scales and Dartmouth COOP ChartsMedical Care, 1992
- Quality of Life in Adults with Insulin-Dependent Diabetes MellitusPsychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 1990
- Generic and Disease-Specific Measures in Assessing Health Status and Quality of LifeMedical Care, 1989
- Measuring the Quality of Life: A Comparison between Physically and Mentally Chronically III Patients and Healthy PersonsPharmacopsychiatry, 1988
- Reliability and Validity of a Diabetes Quality-of-Life Measure for the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT)Diabetes Care, 1988