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Living with Chronic Illness

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The prevalence of diabetes (diagnosed plus undiagnosed) in the total population ... Fifty percent survive. Major surgery and recovery. Lifestyle changes. diet ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Living with Chronic Illness


1
Living with Chronic Illness
  • William P. Wattles, Ph.D.
  • Psychology 314

2
Acute disease
  • short-term
  • less common than chronic
  • either die or get well

3
Chronic illness
  • A disorder that persists for a long time and is
    either incurable or results in pathological
    changes that limit normal functioning.

4
Chronic illness
  • Virtually everyone will eventually develop some
    type of chronic condition.

5
Chronic illness
  • Must deal with
  • Symptoms of the disease
  • Stress of Treatment
  • Feelings of vulnerability
  • Loss of Control
  • Threat to self-esteem

6
Examples of chronic illnesses
  • Cancer
  • diabetes
  • arthritis
  • ALS
  • asthma
  • chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
  • multiple sclerosis
  • Parkinsons disease
  • muscular dystrophy
  • sickle cell anemia
  • HIV

7
Chronic disease
  • long-lasting
  • common
  • 50 at any point in time
  • 100 at one time or another
  • Variable course
  • never completely healthy

8
Coping with Chronic Disease
  • Attitudes and belief about illness
  • personal traits such as depression and optimism
  • coping strategies
  • compliance with prescribed regimens
  • social support.

9
Attitudes and Beliefs
  • According to both the Theory of Reasoned Action
    and Health Belief Model attitudes and beliefs
    predict adaptive behavior.
  • Social norms
  • attitudes
  • affect
  • facilitating conditions

10
Personality
  • Depression may take the energy away needed to
    adapt to the disease
  • anxiety may interfere with sleep and other health
    processes.
  • Optimism-a generalized expectation that the
    future looks good-associated with more adaptive
    behaviors.

11
Social Support.
  • Social support presumably serves to buffer the
    effects of stress for the cancer patient and may
    improve the prognosis.
  • The most helpful behaviors seem to be emotional
    support, sympathy and caring.

12
Impact of Chronic Illness
  • Crisis theory
  • individuals need a state of equilibrium
  • chronic illness upsets this state
  • people search for ways to restore homeostasis
  • failure to do so results in
  • anxiety
  • fear
  • stress

13
Impact on the patient
  • Psychological functioning
  • social
  • physical
  • mental health
  • Self-image
  • positive and negative changes
  • Coping strategies

14
Opportunities for psychology
  • Strategies to improve compliance
  • Noncompliance is a substantial problem in the
    treatment of chronic illness.
  • Creation of support groups
  • Dealing with psychological repercussions
  • Sustaining of personal relationships

15
Impact on the family
  • Adult children
  • change in relationship
  • Spouse
  • Parents

16
Diabetes
  • Diabetes is a disease in which the body does not
    produce or properly use insulin
  • Insulin acts to reduce levels of glucose in the
    blood by interacting in some unknown way with
    cell membranes.

17
Diabetes
  • Diabetes is a disease in which the body cannot
    properly store and use fuel for energy.The fuel
    that your body needs is called glucose, a form of
    sugar.
  • Glucose comes from foods such as breads, cereals,
    pasta, rice, potatoes, fruits and some vegetables

18
  • The cause of diabetes continues to be a mystery,
    although both genetics and environmental factors
    such as obesity and lack of exercise appear to
    play roles.

19
  • Among states having data for 1994 and 2002, the
    age-adjusted prevalence of diagnosed diabetes
    increased more than 10 between 1994-2002 (see
    detailed tables for maps).
  • In twenty-three states including South Carolina,
    age-adjusted prevalence was at least 50 higher
    in 2002 than in 1994.

20
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21
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22
Incidence of Diabetes
  • The prevalence of diabetes (diagnosed plus
    undiagnosed) in the total population of people
    who were 40-74 years of age increased from 8.9
    in the period 1976-1980 to 12.3 by 1988-1994.
  • The increasing frequency of obesity and
    sedentary lifestyles in the population, make it
    likely that diabetes will continue to be a major
    health problem in the U.S.

23
Diabetes is a life-long condition.
  • High blood glucose levels over a long period of
    time can cause blindness, heart disease, kidney
    problems, amputations, nerve damage, and erectile
    dysfunction.
  • Good diabetes care and management can delay or
    prevent the onset of these complications

24
Type 1 diabetes
  • Type 1 diabetes occurs when the body makes little
    or no insulin. It used to be called
    insulin-dependent or juvenile diabetes.
  • There is nothing to be done to prevent type 1
    diabetes, even early diagnosis will not prevent
    it.
  • It is not caused by eating too much sugar.

25
Type 2 diabetes
  • Type 2 diabetes occurs when your body cant use
    the insulin it makes.
  • A person with type 2 diabetes, you may be able to
    keep your blood glucose levels in a target range
    by healthy eating, exercising and taking diabetes
    medication.

26
Adjusting to Diabetes
  • Type 1
  • Insulin-dependent
  • Before age 15
  • underweight
  • equal between men and women
  • requires insulin
  • imperils kidney
  • Type 2
  • Noninsulin dependent
  • After age 30
  • overweight
  • affects more women
  • affects poor more than middle class
  • no injections
  • imperils heart

27
Incidence of Diabetes
  • General Population 6.2
  • African American 13
  • Latinos 10.2
  • Men 8.3
  • Women 8.9

28
The good news
  • People can live a long and healthy life by
    keeping their blood glucose levels in the target
    range.
  • They can do this by
  • Eating healthy meals
  • Exercising
  • Taking diabetes medication, including insulin

29
Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM)
  • Management very demanding
  • injections
  • diet
  • exercise
  • Serious costs of failing to comply
  • blindness
  • kidney failure
  • amputation

30
Lifestyle changes
  • Eat healthy
  • Eat three meals and a bedtime snack each day.
  • Include a food from each of the food groups at
    each meal.
  • If you are thirsty, drink water or diet pop.
  • If you are overweight, eat smaller portions.
    Reduce your intake of fat.
  • Limit sweet and fatty foods.

31
Cardiac Rehabilitation
  • Fifty percent survive
  • Major surgery and recovery
  • Lifestyle changes
  • diet
  • exercise
  • stop smoking
  • Motivation

32
Psychological reactions to CHD
  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Anger
  • Fear
  • Guilt
  • Interpersonal conflict

33
Coping with Cancer
  • Approximately 1.25 million people diagnosed with
    cancer in 1998

34
Coping with Cancer
  • Surgery
  • Radiation
  • Chemotherapy
  • Hormonal treatment
  • Immunotherapy

35
Cancer treatment side effects
  • Loss of hair
  • burns
  • nausea
  • vomiting
  • fatigue
  • sterility

36
Survival
  • More than half of all cancer patients survive at
    least five years

37
HIV and AIDS
  • Relatively new disease
  • The virus is not easily transmitted from person
    to person
  • sex
  • IV drug
  • blood transfusion
  • Preventable

38
AIDS/HIV
  • 1999-IN the U.S., HIV/AIDS fell from 8th to 14th
    among leading causes of death.
  • It remained the leading cause of death for black
    persons aged 25-44.

39
Alzheimers Disease
  • Degenerative disease of the brain
  • cognitive impairment
  • memory loss
  • personality change
  • Sure diagnosis only by autopsy
  • Cause unknown

40
Alzheimers and the family
  • Enormous cost to the family and society
  • Financial and emotional resources exhausted
  • Combines with loss of loved one
  • Chronic stress of providing care for Alzheimers
    patients lowers immune system functioning and
    increases vulnerability to illness.

41
The End
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