Psychological Distress and Incidence of Type 2 Diabetes

Research · May 01, 2014

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  • The study assessed the association between psychological distress and incidence of type 2 diabetes in high- and low-risk populations. The prospective cohort of 5932 diabetes-free adults were classified by prediabetes status and Framingham Offspring Type 2 Diabetes Risk Score into four groups: normoglycemia with risk score 0 to 9, normoglycemia with risk score 10 to 19, prediabetes with risk score 10 to 19, and prediabetes with risk score greater than 19. For the normoglycemia and prediabetes groups with low risk, psychological distress (assessed by the General Health Questionnaire) did not predict type 2 diabetes, with incidence between 1.6% and 15.6%. For those with prediabetes and high-risk scores, 40.9% of individuals with psychological distress compared with 28.5% without distress developed diabetes during the follow-up (odds ratio 2.07 [95% CI, 1.19–3.62]).
  • In patients with prediabetes and at high risk for psychological distress, diabetes progression was accelerated.

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ABSTRACT

Diabetes Care

Psychological Distress and Incidence of Type 2 Diabetes in High-Risk and Low-Risk Populations: The Whitehall II Cohort Study

Diabetes Care 2014 May 01;[EPub Ahead of Print], M Virtanen, JE Ferrie, AG Tabak, TN Akbaraly, J Vahtera, A Singh-Manoux, M Kivimäki

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