National Estimates of the Adult Diabetes Care Continuum in India, 2019-2021

IMPORTANCE: Diabetes is widespread and treatable, but little is known about the diabetes care continuum (diagnosis, treatment, and control) in India and how it varies at the national, state, and district levels. OBJECTIVE: To estimate the adult population levels of diabetes diagnosis, treatment, and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of internal medicine (1960) 2023-09, Vol.183 (9), p.963-972
Hauptverfasser: Varghese, Jithin Sam, Anjana, Ranjit Mohan, Geldsetzer, Pascal, Sudharsanan, Nikkil, Manne-Goehler, Jennifer, Thirumurthy, Harsha, Bhattacharyya, Soura, Narayan, K. M. Venkat, Mohan, Viswanathan, Tandon, Nikhil, Ali, Mohammed K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:IMPORTANCE: Diabetes is widespread and treatable, but little is known about the diabetes care continuum (diagnosis, treatment, and control) in India and how it varies at the national, state, and district levels. OBJECTIVE: To estimate the adult population levels of diabetes diagnosis, treatment, and control in India at national, state, and district levels and by sociodemographic characteristics. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: In this cross-sectional, nationally representative survey study from 2019 to 2021, adults in India from 28 states, 8 union territories, and 707 districts were surveyed for India’s Fifth National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5). The survey team collected data on blood glucose among all adults (18-98 years) who were living in the same household as eligible participants (pregnant or nonpregnant female individuals aged 15-49 years and male individuals aged 15-54 years). The overall sample consisted of 1 895 287 adults. The analytic sample was restricted to those who either self-reported having diabetes or who had a valid measurement of blood glucose. EXPOSURES: The exposures in this survey study were district and state residence; urban vs rural residence; age (18-39 years, 40-64 years, or ≥65 years); sex; and household wealth quintile. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Diabetes was defined by self-report or high capillary blood glucose (fasting: ≥126 mg/dL [to convert to mmol/L, multiply by 0.0555]; nonfasting: ≥220 mg/dL). Among respondents who had previously been diagnosed with diabetes, the main outcome was the proportion treated based on self-reported medication use and the proportion controlled (fasting: blood glucose
ISSN:2168-6106
2168-6114
2168-6114
DOI:10.1001/jamainternmed.2023.3070