Diabulimia puts teens at risk
she co-founded Australasia’s first initiative dedicated to eating disorders among Type 1 diabetics.
Type 1s have what Sole terms a ‘‘cruel’’ method of weight loss at their disposal: purposely omitting insulin.
‘‘Diabulimia’’ is not a medical term, but it is a recognised phenomena.
Dr Rinki Murphy, a diabetes specialist for 10 years, sees a handful of patients who abuse insulin.
She empathises with the daily juggling act her patients are engaged in, to achieve a level of health non-diabetics take for granted.
‘‘It’s more convenient sometimes not to take insulin,’’ Murphy says.
‘‘It hurts to give it, it hurts to check [blood sugar levels], and you find that actually by keeping your level in a constant range you tend to absorb more of what you eat.
Any short term ‘‘benefit’’ is outweighed by potential catastrophe, however.
Blindness, limb amputations, and kidney failure are among the long-term consequences of chronic under-dosing.
In rare instances, the practice results in death from from ketoacidosis - when the body uses fat instead of carbohydrates as fuel, resulting in poisonous chemicals accumulating in the body.
In April, the Telegraph reported United Kingdom woman Lisa Day, a Type 1 diabetic since age 14, had died after years of purposely under-dosing herself with insulin. She was 27.
Sole, who tests her blood glucose levels up to 12 times a day and injects insulin about eight times a day, has never purposefully under-dosed herself.
But she says 30-40 per cent of Type 1 diabetics admit to omitting insulin to lose weight, and a further 80 per cent are aware of the practice. ‘‘It’s terrifying.’’ She first became aware of diabulimia in 2012, when she was a leader at a diabetic youth camp.
‘‘All the girls were talking about it,’’ she recalls.
‘‘I wouldn’t say they were recommending it, more saying, ’I tried this before, have you ever done it, did you get sick, what happened ... ‘.’’
Sole herself eventually found solace in CrossFit – she hasn’t stepped on the scales since she first walked through the gym doors - but her recovery is ongoing.
‘‘There’s always going to be days where you’re really stressed out and you’re tempted to go back to what you know,’’ she says.
The Diabetes and Eating Disorders Awareness initiative aims to educate medical professionals about the issue, and connect Type 1s and their parents with support services.
Sole and co-founder Lisa Ingle, a Type 1 diabetic and registered nurse, have debated the risk of discussing the practice in a public forum.
‘‘We decided, because so many people know about insulin omission, you may as well talk about it,’’ Sole says.
‘‘People are already talking about it. What they’re missing is how dangerous it is.’’