It got a mention on the BBC news today (Monday 25/9/2017) and they were speaking about some programs to follow. Unfortunately a certain person decided that was a good point to start talking to the cat and I never heard the detail of timings.
Very interesting and disturbing piece about this on Radio 4 a few days ago. Not sure which programme unfortunately. Just caught the end of it.'Diabulimia' (not a medical term) is recognised as an eating disorder, although it is called insulin omission not 'diabulimia'.
@DaftThoughts LADA is type 1. If you have LADA, you have type 1.
have cut and pasted this
hope it helps
Latent autoimmune diabetes of adults (LADA) is a form of diabetes mellitus type 1that occurs in adulthood, often with a slower course of onset than type 1 diabetes diagnosed in juveniles. Adultswith LADA may initially be diagnosed incorrectly as having type 2 diabetes based on their age, particularly if they have risk factors for type 2 diabetes.
My mum was T2 and died in November she was admitted to hospital for a month because of weight loss. She had sudden weight loss after she was diagnosed with T2 and was fitting into clothes for teenagers when she was admitted. She wouldn’t eat towards the end unless I made her meals and the hospital put her on insulin which I helped her inject. I only found out after she died she hadn’t been taking her metformin for years when I found boxes of her medication hidden all over the house. She never would have admitted it but I think she had depression and it sounds like she had a form of diabulimia. I think there needs to be more awareness of this I didn’t know it existed until I read this post but I’m sure my mum had it
I saw this episode and while I was happy to see a documentary finally discussing this, I was extremely disappointed that their definition was "only type 1 diabetics can suffer from diabulimia". It felt like LADA, MODY, T3c and any other type of diabetic who has lost insulin production and is insulin dependent can't possibly suffer from this condition because of the narrow definition of which type can have it. I'm a diabetic who has chronic depression and a history of eating disorders including bingeing, and I struggle every time I eat something 'bad' with taking my injections. I personally felt completely thrown under the bus by this episode because I supposedly can't get diabulimia. It's a very strange feeling to be so happy to have this recognized and yet be excluded from it at the same time.
You could try contacting the DWED website for info and advice? Hope you find some support. XI know this forum is not so current, but THANK YOU.
As a MODY 3 I have to say, I googled “MODY and Diabulimia” and your comment is the ONLY thing that popped up in my search. Absolutely no peer reviewed papers, no mayo clinic blurb, nothing. I was beginning to think I am completely bananas!
“Thrown under the bus”? Try completely forgotten, pushed to the side. It’s how I feel every time an ER doctor says “MODY?! What’s MODY?”
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