Literature DB >> 16249539

Association among individual deprivation, glycemic control, and diabetes complications: the EPICES score.

Hélène Bihan1, Silvana Laurent, Catherine Sass, Gérard Nguyen, Caroline Huot, Jean Jacques Moulin, René Guegen, Philippe Le Toumelin, Hervé Le Clésiau, Emilio La Rosa, Gérard Reach, Régis Cohen.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Previous studies have related poor glycemic control and/or some diabetes complications to low socioeconomic status. Some aspects of socioeconomic status have not been assessed in these studies. In the present study, we used an individual index of deprivation, the Evaluation de la Précarité et des Inégalités de santé dans les Centres d'Examens de Santé (Evaluation of Precarity and Inequalities in Health Examination Centers [EPICES]) score, to determine the relationship among glycemic control, diabetes complications, and individual conditions of deprivation. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional prevalence study in 135 consecutive diabetic patients (age 59.41 +/- 13.2 years [mean +/- SD]) admitted in the hospitalization unit of a French endocrine department. Individual deprivation was assessed by the EPICES score, calculated from 11 socioeconomic questions. Glycemic control, lipid levels, blood pressure, retinopathy, neuropathy, and nephropathy were assessed.
RESULTS: HbA(1c) level was significantly correlated with the EPICES score (r = 0.366, P < 0.001). The more deprived patients were more likely than the less deprived patients to have poor glycemic control (beta = 1.984 [SE 0.477], P < 0.001), neuropathy (odds ratio 2.39 [95% CI 1.05-5.43], P = 0.037), retinopathy (3.66 [1.39-9.64], P = 0.009), and being less often admitted for 1-day hospitalization (0.32 [0.14-0.74], P = 0.008). No significant relationship was observed with either nephropathy or cardiovascular risk factors.
CONCLUSIONS: Deprivation status is associated with poor metabolic control and more frequent microvascular complications, i.e., retinopathy and neuropathy. The medical and economic burden of deprived patients is high.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16249539     DOI: 10.2337/diacare.28.11.2680

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


  38 in total

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4.  Body mass index growth trajectories associated with the different parameters of the metabolic syndrome at adulthood.

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7.  Association of age, sex and deprivation with quality indicators for diabetes: population-based cross sectional survey in primary care.

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9.  Determinants of quality in diabetes care process: The population-based Torino Study.

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10.  Ethnicity and neighbourhood deprivation determines the response rate in sexual dysfunction surveys.

Authors:  Lasantha S Malavige; Pabasi Wijesekara; Dhanesha Seneviratne Epa; Priyanga Ranasinghe; Jonathan C Levy
Journal:  BMC Res Notes       Date:  2015-09-04
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