Literature DB >> 11679460

Projection of diabetes burden through 2050: impact of changing demography and disease prevalence in the U.S.

J P Boyle1, A A Honeycutt, K M Narayan, T J Hoerger, L S Geiss, H Chen, T J Thompson.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To project the number of people with diagnosed diabetes in the U.S. through 2050, accounting for changing demography and diabetes prevalence rates. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We combined age-, sex-, and race-specific diagnosed diabetes prevalence rates-predicted from 1980-1998 trends in prevalence data from the National Health Interview Survey-with Bureau of Census population demographic projections. Sensitivity analyses were performed by varying both prevalence rate and population projections.
RESULTS: The number of Americans with diagnosed diabetes is projected to increase 165%, from 11 million in 2000 (prevalence of 4.0%) to 29 million in 2050 (prevalence of 7.2%). The largest percent increase in diagnosed diabetes will be among those aged > or =75 years (+271% in women and +437% in men). The fastest growing ethnic group with diagnosed diabetes is expected to be black males (+363% from 2000-2050), with black females (+217%), white males (+148%), and white females (+107%) following. Of the projected 18 million increase in the number of cases of diabetes in 2050, 37% are due to changes in demographic composition, 27% are due to population growth, and 36% are due to increasing prevalence rates.
CONCLUSIONS: If recent trends in diabetes prevalence rates continue linearly over the next 50 years, future changes in the size and demographic characteristics of the U.S. population will lead to dramatic increases in the number of Americans with diagnosed diabetes.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11679460     DOI: 10.2337/diacare.24.11.1936

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Diabetes Care        ISSN: 0149-5992            Impact factor:   19.112


  243 in total

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4.  Complications of diabetes in elderly people.

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Review 5.  Percutaneous coronary intervention in diabetics.

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6.  Characteristics of low-income African-American and Caucasian adults that are important in self-management of type 2 diabetes.

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Review 8.  A review of rodent models of type 2 diabetic skeletal fragility.

Authors:  Roberto J Fajardo; Lamya Karim; Virginia I Calley; Mary L Bouxsein
Journal:  J Bone Miner Res       Date:  2014       Impact factor: 6.741

Review 9.  Epidemiology of the insulin resistance syndrome.

Authors:  James B Meigs
Journal:  Curr Diab Rep       Date:  2003-02       Impact factor: 4.810

10.  Left bundle branch block in type 2 diabetes mellitus: a sign of advanced cardiovascular involvement.

Authors:  Eliscer Guzman; Narpinder Singh; Ijaz A Khan; Andreas P Niarchos; Cherian Verghese; Cesare Saponieri; Harinder K Singh; Ramesh M Gowda; Balendu C Vasavada; Ronny A Cohen
Journal:  Ann Noninvasive Electrocardiol       Date:  2004-10       Impact factor: 1.468

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