| Literature DB >> 25996933 |
Natasha Sobers-Grannum1, Madhuvanti M Murphy1, Anders Nielsen1, Cornelia Guell2, T Alafia Samuels1, Lisa Bishop1, Nigel Unwin3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diabetes (DM) is estimated to affect 10-15% of the adult population in the Caribbean. Preventive efforts require population wide measures to address its social determinants. We undertook a systematic review to determine current knowledge about the social distribution of diabetes, its risk factors and major complications in the Caribbean. This paper describes our findings on the distribution by gender.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25996933 PMCID: PMC4440736 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0126799
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flowchart of search strategy and article selection.
Characteristics of studies from the Caribbean region describing distribution of selected social determinants by diabetes prevalence, control, complications and diabetes-related risk factors.
| Article Title | Study Type/Title | Sample Size | Age ranges | Study-base | Country | Relationships studied (RISK OF BIAS) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ageyamang, 2009 | Cross-sectional | 855 | 12–17 | School-based | Suriname | Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH); Physical activity and gender (HIGH) |
| Anderson, 2011 | Cross-sectional | 857 | 24–74 | Population-based | Jamaica | Diabetes prevalence and gender (HIGH; Impaired fasting glucose and gender (HIGH); Obesity (BMI) and gender (MEDIUM); Obesity (WC) and gender MEDIUM); Smoking and gender (HIGH); Aspect of diet and gender (HIGH) |
| Andrade, 2009 | Cross-sectional/ Study of Health and Well-being in the Elderly in Latin America and the Caribbean(SABE) | 13753 | 60+ | Population-based | Barbados & Cuba | Diabetes prevalence and gender (HIGH) |
| Apparico, 2007 | Cross-sectional | 132 | 27–81 | Health facility | Trinidad | Diabetes control (HbA1c) by gender(HIGH) |
| Atallah, 2007 | Cross-sectional/ Prevalence of Hypertension in a Population Précaire Guadeloupéenne | 2420 | 18–69 | Health facility | Guadeloupe | Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH); Physical activity and gender (HIGH); Smoking and gender (HIGH) |
| Atallah, 2011 | Cross-sectional/ APHYGUAD study | 685 | 18–74 | Population-based | Guadelope | Physical activity and gender(HIGH) |
| Barbosa, 2010 | Cross-sectional/ SABE | 1508 | 60+ | Population-based | Barbados | Diabetes prevalence and gender(MEDIUM); Obesity (BMI) and gender (LOW); Obesity (WC) and gender (LOW); Physical activity and gender (HIGH); Smoking and gender (MEDIUM) |
| Barbosa, 2011 | Cross-sectional/ SABE | 3413 | 60+ | Population-based | Cuba & Barbados | Diabetes prevalence and gender(MEDIUM); Obesity (BMI) and gender (LOW); Obesity (WC) and gender (LOW); Physical activity and gender (HIGH); Smoking and gender (MEDIUM) |
| Barcelo, 2007 | Cross-sectional/ SABE | 13753 | 60+ | Population-based | Barbados & Cuba | Diabetes prevalence and gender (MEDIUM); Obesity (BMI) and gender(LOW); Obesity (WC) and gender (LOW); Smoking and gender (MEDIUM) |
| Barcelo, 2007 | Cohort | 504 | >0 | Population-based | Cuba | Mortality and gender (HIGH) |
| Barrett, 2013 | Cross-sectional | 276 | 14–19 | School-based | Jamaica | Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH); Obesity (WC) and gender (HIGH) |
| Block, 2012 | Cross-sectional/Grenada Heart Project, 2005–2007 | 2017 | 18–104 | Population-based | Grenada (Petit Martinique & Carriacou) | Diabetes prevalence and gender (MEDIUM); Physical activity and gender (HIGH); Obesity (BMI) and gender (MEDIUM); Smoking and gender (MEDIUM); Obesity (WC) and gender (MEDIUM); Metabolic syndrome and gender(HIGH); Aspect of diet and gender(HIGH) |
| Bourne, 2011 | Cross-sectional/ Jamaica Surveys of Living Conditions(JSLC) | 31,801 | >18 | Population-based | Jamaica | Diabetes prevalence and gender(HIGH) |
| Boyne, 2010 | Cross-sectional/ International Collaborative Study of Hypertension in Blacks (ICSHIB) | 393 | 25–74 | Population-based | Jamaica | Obesity (BMI) and gender(HIGH); Obesity (WC) and gender (HIGH) |
| Brathwaite, N, 2011 | Cross-sectional | 2469 | 21–60 | Population-based | Bahamas | Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH) |
| Chadee, 2013 | Cross-sectional | 15649 | >17 | Institution-based | Trinidad and Tobago | Diabetes prevalence and gender (HIGH) |
| Colon-Lopez, 2013 | Cross-sectional/Puerto Rico Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS-PR) | 593 | >18 | Population-based | Puerto Rico | Aspect of diet and gender (LOW) |
| Cruz, 2013 | Cross-sectional | 275 | ≥ 21 | Tertiary Institution-based | Puerto Rico | Physical activity and gender (HIGH) |
| Cumberbatch, 2011 | Cross-sectional/ Jamaica Health and Lifestyle Survey 2007–2008 (JHLS 2007–8) | 2,432 | 15–74 | Population-based | Jamaica | Diabetes prevalence and gender (HIGH); Physical activity and gender (HIGH); Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH); Smoking and gender (HIGH) |
| Cunningham-Myrie, 2013 | Cross-sectional/JHLS 2007–8) | 2848 | 15–74 | Population-based | Jamaica | Obesity (BMI) and gender (MEDIUM); Obesity (WC) and gender (MEDIUM); Physical activity and gender (HIGH); Diabetes prevalence and gender (MEDIUM) |
| da Silva Coquiera, 2009 | Cross-sectional/SABE | 1905 | >60 | Population-based | Cuba | Obesity (BMI) and gender (LOW) |
| da Silva Coqueiro, R., 2010 | Cross-sectional/SABE | 1905 | ≥ 60 | Population-based | Cuba | Obesity (BMI) and gender(MEDIUM) |
| Diaz Sanchez, 2009 | Cross-sectional/ Second National Survey on Risk Factors and Chronic Diseases (ENFRENT II) | 19519 | ≥ 20 | Population-based | Cuba | Obesity (BMI) and gender (MEDIUM); Obesity (WC) and gender (MEDIUM) |
| Fabelo, 2013 | Cross-sectional | 108 | (No range given) | Institution-based | Cuba | Smoking and gender (HIGH) |
| Fabian, 2013 | Cross-sectional | 275 | ≥ 21 | Tertiary Institution-based | Puerto Rico | Aspect of diet and gender (HIGH) |
| Ferguson, 2008 | Cross-sectional/ Jamaica Healthy Lifestyle Survey 2000–2001 (JHLS 2000–2001) | 2012 | 15–74 | Population-based | Jamaica | Diabetes prevalence and gender (HIGH/UNCLEAR); Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH/UNCLEAR); Obesity (WC) and gender (HIGH/UNCLEAR); Physical activity and gender (HIGH); Smoking and gender (HIGH) |
| Ferguson, 2010a | Prospective Cohort /Spanish Town | 708 | 25–74 | Population-based | Jamaica | Diabetes prevalence and gender(HIGH); Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH); Obesity (WC) and gender (HIGH); Smoking and gender (HIGH) |
| Ferguson, 2010b | Cohort study/1986 Jamaica Birth Cohort | 839 | 18–20 | Population-based | Jamaica | Obesity (BMI) and gender(MEDIUM); Obesity (WC) and gender (MEDIUM); Physical activity and gender (HIGH); Impaired fasting glucose and gender (MEDIUM); Metabolic syndrome and gender (MEDIUM) |
| Ferguson, 2011 | Cross-sectional/ (JHLS 2007–8) | 2848 | 15–74 | Population-based | Jamaica | Diabetes prevalence and gender (HIGH); Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH/UNCLEAR); Obesity (WC) and gender (HIGH/UNCLEAR); Physical activity and gender (HIGH); Smoking and gender (HIGH); Diabetes control(FG) and gender (HIGH/UNCLEAR) |
| Foucan,2007 | Cross-sectional | 966 | 18–74 | Health facility | Guadelope | Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH); Obesity (WC) and gender (HIGH); Impaired fasting glucose and gender(HIGH) |
| Garza, 2011 | Cross-sectional/Asthma Depression and Anxiety in Puerto Rican Youth | 872 | 10–19 | Population-based | Puerto Rico | Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH); |
| Gonzalez, 2013 | Cross-sectional | 274 | 21–53 | Tertiary Institution-based | Puerto Rico | Smoking and gender (HIGH) |
| Kim, 2007 | Cross-sectional/SABE | Cuba-1904, Bdos-1508 | >60 | Population-based | Barbados Cuba | Smoking and gender(HIGH) |
| Laborde, 2013 | Cross-sectional/Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (2006,2010) | 6025 | >18 | Population-based | Puerto Rico | Obesity (BMI) and gender (MEDIUM) |
| Latchan, 2010 | Cross-sectional | 688 | 18–92 | Health Facility | Trinidad | Obesity (WC) and gender (HIGH); Diabetes prevalence and gender (HIGH) |
| Llibre, 2011 | Prospective cohort/10/66 Study | 3015 | 65+ | Population-based | Cuba | Diabetes prevalence and gender (MEDIUM) |
| Modeste, 2007 | Cross-sectional | 407 | 18–74 | Faith-based institution | Barbados | Physical activity and gender (HIGH); Diabetes prevalence and gender (HIGH) |
| Nam, 2012 | Cross-sectional/ SABE | Bdos 994 Cuba 1073 | 60+ | Population-based | Barbados and Cuba | Diabetes prevalence and gender (MEDIUM); Obesity (BMI) and gender (MEDIUM); Obesity (WC) and gender (MEDIUM); Smoking and gender (MEDIUM) |
| Naranjo, 2013 | Cross-sectional | 620 | >18 | Health facility-based | Cuba | Obesity(WC) and gender (HIGH) |
| Nemesure, 2007 | Cohort study/ Barbados Eye Study (BES) | 4314 | 40 and older | Population-based | Barbados | Obesity (BMI) and gender (LOW) |
| Nemesure 2008a | Cohort study/ (BES) | 2793 | 40–84 | Population-based | Barbados | Obesity incidence (BMI) and gender (MEDIUM); Diabetes incidence and gender (MEDIUM) |
| Nemesure, 2008b | Cohort study/ (BES) | 1790 | 40–84 | Population-based | Barbados | Obesity incidence (BMI) and gender (MEDIUM) |
| Nunez, 2011 | Cross-sectional | 53 | 26–80 | Health facility based | US Virgin Islands | Diabetes control (HbA1c) and gender (HIGH) |
| Palloni, 2007 | Cross-sectional/ SABE | 3713 | 60+ | Population-based | Barbados & Cuba | Diabetes prevalence and gender (HIGH) |
| Perez, 2008 | Cross-sectional | 867 | 21–79 | Population-based | Puerto Rico | Impaired fasting glucose and gender (LOW); Obesity (WC) and gender (LOW); Metabolic syndrome and gender (MEDIUM |
| Sinnapah, 2009 | Cross-sectional | 122 | 17–66 | Health facility based | Guadelope | Physical activity and gender (HIGH); Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH); Aspect of diet and gender (HIGH) |
| Sinnapah, 2009 | Cross-sectional | 780 | 10–18 | School-based | Guadelope | Physical activity and gender (HIGH); Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH) |
| Sinnapah, 2009 | Cross-sectional | 720 | 11–17 | School-based | Guadelope | Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH); Obesity (WC) and gender (HIGH) |
| Soloway, 2009 | Cross-sectional | 278 | 18–91 | Population-based/Convenience sample | Saba(Netherlands) | Obesity (BMI) and gender (HIGH) |
| Tulloch-Reid, 2013 | Cross-sectional/JHLS 2007–8 | 1432 | 40–74 | Population-based | Jamaica | Smoking and gender (HIGH) |
Characteristics of studies providing information on the distribution of diabetes prevalence by gender.
| Article Title /(Study name) | Sample Size | Age ranges | Country | Risk of bias assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anderson 2011 | 857 | 24–74 | Jamaica | Cross-sectional; population-based; Response rate: 62%; 2006 WHO criteria were used to classify subjects according to their glucose tolerance status: diabetes = fasting plasma glucose ≥ 7 0 mmol/l or 2 h postprandial glucose ≥ 11 1 mmol/l). |
| Block 2012 | 2017 | 18–104 | Grenada (Petit Martinique & Carriacou) | Cross-sectional study; Population-based; 64% response rate; A diagnosis of diabetes was based on participant self-report or fasting glucose of 140 mg/dL. |
| Cumberbatch 2011 (JHLS 2007–8) | 2432 | 15–74 | Jamaica | Cross-sectional study; Population-based; 98% response rate; Diabetes measured by fasting capillary glucose ≥6.1 mmol/L or if they responded yes to the question, “Have you been prescribed medication for your diabetes?” |
| Cunnngham-Myrie, 2013 (JHLS 2007–8) | 2848 | 15–74 | Jamaica | Cross-sectional study; Population-based; 98% response rate; Diabetes measured by fasting capillary glucose ≥6.1 mmol/L or if they responded yes to the question, “Have you been prescribed medication for your diabetes?” |
| Ferguson 2008 (JHLS 2000–2001) | 2012 | 15–74 | Jamaica | Cross-sectional survey; Population-based; 87.6% response rate; Diabetes mellitus was defined as having a fasting glucose of greater than or equal to 6.1 mmol/L or being on treatment for diabetes. |
| Ferguson 2010a | 708 | 25–74 | Jamaica | Cohort study; 54% follow-up of original cohort; Data analysed for only 45% of eligible participants at baseline; Diabetes mellitus was defined according to theAmerican Diabetes Association 1997 criteria as fasting glucose ≥ 7.0 mmol/L or two-hour post challenge glucose of ≥ 11.1 mmol/L or taking medication for diabetes mellitus. |
| Llibre 2011 | 3015 | 65+ | Cuba | Cross-sectional; Population-based; Response rate 97.6%; Diabetes mellitus, diagnosed in two ways: 1) self-report of physician diagnosis of diabetes (“Have you ever been told you have diabetes? Did you start treatment? Are you still being treated?”); and/or 2) fasting glucose of _7.0 mmol/L confirmed on two different days |
| Ferguson 2011 (JHLS 2007–8) | 2848 | 15–74 | Jamaica | Cross-sectional study; Population-based; 98% response rate; Diabetes measured by fasting capillary glucose ≥6.1 mmol/L or if they responded yes to the question, “Haveyou been prescribed medication for your diabetes?” |
|
| Bdos 1508 Cuba 1903 | 60+ | Barbados & Cuba | Cross-sectional; Population-based; 81% response rate in Barbados, 95.3% in Cuba.Diabetes measured by self-report, No adjustment for confounders |
|
| 1508 | 60+ | Barbados | Cross-sectional, Population-based; Response rate 81%; DM as measured by self-report via a questionnaire. |
|
| Bdos1508 Cuba 1905 | 60+ | Cuba & Barbados | Cross-sectional; Population-based; Diabetes measured by self-report, 81% response rate in Barbados, 95.3% in Cuba |
|
| Bdos 1508 Cuba 1903 | 60+ | Barbados & Cuba | Cross-sectional; Population-based; 81% response rate in Barbados, 95.3% in Cuba.Diabetes measured by self-report, No adjustment for confounders |
|
| Bdos 994 Cuba 1073 | 65+ | Barbados and Cuba | Cross-sectional; Diabetes measured by self-report, 81% response rate in Barbados, 95.3% in Cuba no adj for confounders |
|
| Bdos 1508 Cuba 1903 | 60+ | Barbados & Cuba | Cross-sectional; Diabetes measured by self-report, population-based, 81% response rate in Barbados, 95.3% in Cuba no adjustment for confounders |
|
| 31,801 | No ages given | Jamaica | Cross-sectional study; Population-based; JSLC for 2007 had a response rate 73.8%, and for 2002 it was 70.3%; diabetes measured by self-report via questionnaire; Inconsistent assessment of point estimate; |
|
| 15,260(2002) 3,322(2007) | >18 | Jamaica | Cross-sectional study; Population-based; JSLC for 2007 had a response rate 73.8%, and for 2002 it was 70.3%; diabetes measured by self-report via questionnaire; Inconsistent assessment of point estimate; |
|
| 688 | 18–92 | Trinidad | Cross-sectional; Health Facility; Response rate not given; patient was classified as having diabetes if two of the following criteria were met: (1) a fasting blood sugar ≥ 7mmol/L or a 2-hour post-prandial reading of ≥ 11.1mmol/L following a 75 g glucose load, and (2) currently receiving any combination of lifestyle interventions, oral antidiabetic drugs orinsulin therapy. |
|
| 407 | 18–74 | Barbados | Cross-sectional; Faith-based institution; Response rate = 66.9%; DM measured as Fasting venous plasma glucose level of 7.8 mmol/L (140 mg/dL) or higher was used to classify a person as diabetic, or if a person self-reported a physician’s diagnosis of diabetes. |
|
| 15649 | >17 years | Trinidad and Tobago | Cross-sectional; Database of State-managed financial assistance program; Usable data for 68%; Diabetes measured by self-report; |
a Jamaica Health and Lifestyle Survey 2007–8.
b Jamaica Health and lifestyle Survey 2000–1.
c Study of Health and Well-being in the Elderly in Latin America and the Caribbean.
d Jamaica Survey of Living Conditions.
*These studies use self-report to diagnose diabetes.
**These studies are not population-based.
Fig 2Relationship between gender and diabetes prevalence.
Articles assessing diabetes prevalence by objective measures and self-report were included.
Fig 3Gender and objective diabetes prevalence.
Only articles assessing diabetes prevalence by objective measures were included.
Characteristics of studies providing information on the distribution of obesity prevalence by gender.
| Article Title | Sample Size | Country | Age ranges | Prevalence Males (%) | Prevalence Females (%) | Risk of bias assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atallah, 2007 | 2420 | Guadelope | 18–69 | 12.3 | 29.0 | Cross-sectional; Health-facility-based; Obesity measured objectively. Defined as BMI>30 |
| Barbosa 2010 | 1508 | Barbados | 60–74 | 24.7 | 47.2 | Cross-sectional; Population-based; 81% response rate in Barbados, 95.3% in Cuba. BMI objectively measured. BMI measured as >28kg/m2 |
| Barbosa 2011 | 1508 / 1905 | Barbados / Cuba | Over 60 | Barbados: 29.6 / Cuba: 12.7 | Barbados: 47.2 / Cuba: 30.7 | Cross-sectional; Population-based; 81% response rate in Barbados, 95.3% in Cuba; BMI objectively measured. |
| Barrett 2013 | 276 | Jamaica | 14–19 | 20 | 24 | Cross-sectional; School-based; Response rate 92%; BMI objectively measured; Adjustments for confounding made. |
| Block, 2012 | 2017 | Grenada | 18–104 | 17.0 | 42.0 | Cross-sectional; Population-based; 64% response rate; BMI objectively measured |
| Brathwaite, 2011 | 2469 | Bahamas | 21 to 60 | 25.2 | 37.9 | Cross-sectional; population-based; Coverage rate of 64%; BMI objectively measured; |
| Cunningham-Myrie, 2013 | 2848 | Jamaica | 15–74 | 12.3 (9.4, 15.9) | 37.5 (34.6, 40.5) | Cross-sectional; Population-based; Response rate 98%, BMI objectively measured |
| da Silva Coquiero, 2010 | 1905 | Cuba | > = 60 | 12.7 | 30.7 | Cross-sectional; Population-based; Response rate 95.3%, BMI objectively measured. |
| Diaz Sanchez, 2009 | 19519 | Cuba | > = 20 | 7.9; (95% CI: 7.3–8.6). | 15.4; (95% CI: 14.5–16.3) | Cross-sectional; population-based; Response rate not stated; BMI objectively measured; |
| Ferguson, 2008 | 2045 | Jamaica | 15–74 | 9.0 (95% CI) (6.8–11.3) | 30.0 95% CI (26.8–33.2) | Cross-sectional; population-based; crude presentation of RF; Response rate 87.6%; BMI objectively measured. |
| Ferguson, 2010a | 708 | Jamaica | 25–74 | 6.9 | 28.2 | Population based; objective measures, (and no missing data for this relationship); lack of adjustment for confounders |
| Ferguson, 2011 | 2848 | Jamaica | 15–74 | 12.4 | 37.7 | Cross-sectional; population based; Not age adjusted and missing data unclear (data weighted for missing values); BMI objectively measured. |
| Foucan, 2007 | 966 | Guadelope | 18–74 | 11.2 | 14.8 | Cross-sectional, health-facility, No missing values, objective measures taken, no response rate reported, no age adjustment |
| Garza, 2011 | 436 | Puerto Rico | 10–19 | 45.0 | 33.8 | Cross-sectional; population-based; Response rate 79.5%; BMI measured via self-report of height and weight |
| Laborde, 2013 | 6025 | Puerto Rico | >18 | 27.3 | 32.2 | Cross-sectional; population-based; Response rate 61%; BMI measured by self-report of height and weight |
| Nemesure, 2007 | 4314 | Barbados | 40–84 | 11.5 | 33.2 | Cohort study(baseline data used here); Population-based; 84% response rate. BMI objectively measured. |
Fig 4Relationship between gender and obesity.
Only articles assessing obesity using an objective measure of body mass index (BMI) were included.
Characteristics of population-based cross-sectional and cohort studies providing information on the distribution of smoking prevalence by gender.
| Author, year published | Sample size | Country | Sex (% Male) | Age range | Risk of bias assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anderson, 2011 | 857 | Jamaica | 40.1% | 24–74 | Response rate 62%; No adjustment for confounders |
| Block, 2012 | 2017 | Grenada | 39.8% | 18–104 | Response rate 64%; Adjustment for age; No assessment of precision of estimates |
| Cumberbatch, 2011 | 2848 | Jamaica | 31.0% | 15–74 | Response rate 98%; No adjustment for confounders |
| Ferguson, 2008 | 2012 | Jamaica | 33.5% | 15–74 | Response rate 87.6%; No adjustment for confounders |
| Ferguson, 2010a | 708 | Jamaica | 36.8% | 25–74 | 54% follow-up of original cohort; No adjustment for confounders |
| Kim, 2008 | 1504 1904 | Barbados Cuba | 38.7% 37.2% | > = 60 | Response rate 81% in Barbados, 95.3% in Cuba; Adjusted for age |
Fig 5Relationship between gender and smoking.
Data from population-based cross-sectional studies.