Impaired thinking in diabetic adults
People with type 2 diabetes may be slower to process information when it comes to their attention span and memory ability.
Nicole Milne, a PhD student from The University of Western Australia's School of Psychology, revealed the results of her study at the World Diabetes Congress, held last week in Melbourne.
Ms Milne said baseline results from the study, funded by the Diabetes Research Foundation of WA, showed diabetics aged over 60 years experienced compromised performance across a range of thinking skills.
“Participants in the study were slower to process information during timed tasks that measured their attention and memory ability, compared to other people of the same age,” she said.
“Significantly slower thinking skills – at a level that would affect day to day functioning – were also observed in 32% of those in the study when they were detecting a target and one in four participants during memory tasks.
“In comparison, only 7% of the general population are likely to complete these tasks at a similarly slowed pace so the impact of type 2 diabetes in this area is sizeable.”
Ms Milne said the results also revealed the mental flexibility and higher level thinking skills of study participants were lower than expected for their age group.