Change in Diabetes Prevalence and Control among New York City Adults: NYC Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys 2004–2014

被引:0
作者
Lorna E. Thorpe
Rania Kanchi
Shadi Chamany
Jesica S. Rodriguez-Lopez
Claudia Chernov
Amy Freeman
Sharon E. Perlman
机构
[1] NYU School of Medicine,Department of Population Health
[2] NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene,Division of Prevention and Primary Care
[3] Universidad De La Salle,Division of Epidemiology
[4] NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene,undefined
来源
Journal of Urban Health | 2018年 / 95卷
关键词
Diabetes; Control diabetes; Biomonitoring; Health inequalities;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
National examination surveys provide trend information on diabetes prevalence, diagnoses, and control. Few localities have access to such information. Using a similar design as the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), two NYC Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NYC HANES) were conducted over a decade, recruiting adults ≥ 20 years using household probability samples (n = 1808 in 2004; n = 1246 in 2013–2014) and physical exam survey methods benchmarked against NHANES. Participants had diagnosed diabetes if told by a health provider they had diabetes, and undiagnosed diabetes if they had no diagnosis but a fasting plasma glucose ≥ 126 mg/dl or A1C ≥ 6.5%. We found that between 2004 and 2014, total diabetes prevalence (diagnosed and undiagnosed) in NYC increased from 13.4 to 16.0% (P = 0.089). In 2013–2014, racial/ethnic disparities in diabetes burden had widened; diabetes was highest among Asians (24.6%), and prevalence was significantly lower among non-Hispanic white adults (7.7%) compared to that among other racial/ethnic groups (P < 0.001). Among adults with diabetes, the proportion of cases diagnosed increased from 68.3 to 77.3% (P = 0.234), and diagnosed cases with very poor control (A1C > 9%), decreased from 26.9 to 18.0% (P = 0.269), though both were non-significant. While local racial/ethnic disparities in diabetes prevalence persist, findings suggest modest improvements in diabetes diagnosis and management.
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页码:826 / 831
页数:5
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