Diabetes Care, Vol 20, Issue 10 1543-1546, Copyright © 1997 by American Diabetes Association
The psychosocial impact of severe hypoglycemic episodes on spouses of patients with IDDM
L Gonder-Frederick, D Cox, B Kovatchev, D Julian and W Clarke
Department of Psychiatric Medicine, University of Virginia Health Sciences Center, Charlottesville 22908, USA. lag3g@virginia.edu
OBJECTIVE: No previous studies have examined the psychosocial impact of
severe hypoglycemic episodes in IDDM patients on their spouses. This study
compared spouses of IDDM patients with and without a history of recent
severe hypoglycemia (SH) using traditional measures of psychosocial status
and marital conflict, as well as diabetes-specific measures. RESEARCH
DESIGN AND METHODS: A total of 61 nondiabetic spouses (23 wives and 38
husbands) of IDDM patients participated in the study. Spouses completed a
battery of traditional psychometric measures (depression, anxiety, marital
conflict) and diabetes-specific measures (fear of hypoglycemia, marital
conflict over diabetes, sleep disturbance caused by hypoglycemia). Scores
of spouses of IDDM patients with and without a recent history of SH were
compared with t tests. RESULTS: Spouses of IDDM patients with and without a
recent history of SH showed no differences on traditional psychometric
measures of depression, anxiety, and marital conflict. However, spouses of
patients with a recent history of SH showed significantly more fear of
hypoglycemia, marital conflict about diabetes management, and sleep
disturbances caused by hypoglycemia. Exploratory analyses of variance
(ANOVAs) found no differences on psychometric measures between wives and
husbands, with the exception that husbands of SH patients reported more
sleep disturbance. Nondiabetic spouses, on average, showed greater fear of
hypoglycemia than their diabetic partners. CONCLUSIONS: Although SH in IDDM
patients can have a significant impact on the psychosocial status of their
spouses, in this study the negative impact was restricted to areas of life
that are directly related to diabetes and its management. Thus, SH per se
is not necessarily associated with significant increases in spousal
anxiety, depression, or marital conflict, but may be associated with types
of diabetes-specific psychosocial distress that are not easily identified
by traditional psychometric measures.