| Literature DB >> 33100218 |
Carolina Santamaría-Ulloa1, Melina Montero-López2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Costa Rica, similar to many other Latin American countries is undergoing population aging at a fast pace. As a result of the epidemiological transition, the prevalence of diabetes has increased. This condition impacts not only individual lives, but also the healthcare system. The goal of this study is to examine the expected impact of diabetes, in terms of economic costs on the healthcare system and lives lost. We will also project how long it will take for the number of elderly individuals who are diabetic to double in Costa Rica.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33100218 PMCID: PMC7586658 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-020-01291-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Fig. 1Prevalence of diabetes in the elderly population by sex. Selected countries and cities (percentages). Source: Own elaboration based on results from Brenes-Camacho and Rosero-Bixby [8]; McDonald [29]; Andrade [2]
Descriptive information of the CRELES Costa Rican elderly at baseline: 2004–2006 (weighted estimates)
| Characteristic, | Elderly populationa | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Non- diabetic | Diabetic | |
| | 49,0 | 49,6 | 46,8 |
| | 40,6 | 40,7 | 40,2 |
| | |||
| Male | 47,5 | 49,8 | 38,8*** |
| Female | 52,5 | 50,3 | 61,2*** |
| | |||
| 60–69 yrs | 53,8 | 53,5 | 54,7** |
| 70–79 yrs | 31,6 | 30,6 | 35,3*** |
| 80+ | 14,7 | 15,9 | 10,0*** |
| | |||
| Normal | 31,7 | 35,7 | 16,7*** |
| Increased risk of metabolic complications | 23,2 | 23,7 | 21,3 |
| Substantially increased risk of metabolic complications | 45,1 | 40,7 | 62,0*** |
| | |||
| Underweight | 3,3 | 4,0 | 0,6*** |
| Normal | 28,5 | 31,4 | 17,2*** |
| Overweight | 42,1 | 42,1 | 42,2** |
| Obese | 26,1 | 22,5 | 40,0*** |
| | |||
| Never | 35,7 | 36,0 | 34,7 |
| Former active or passive smoker | 38,9 | 39,9 | 35,2** |
| Current passive smoker | 13,8 | 13,1 | 16,5* |
| Current active smoker | 11,6 | 11,0 | 13,7* |
| | |||
| Never | 34,5 | 34,5 | 34,6 |
| Former alcohol drinker | 29,7 | 30,9 | 24,9*** |
| Current alcohol drinker | 35,8 | 34,6 | 40,4*** |
| | 12,3 | 13,0 | 9,8 |
| | 31,3 | 33,8 | 22,0*** |
| | 34,1 | 27,1 | 53,7*** |
| | 11,8 | 11,6 | 12,7 |
| | |||
| Normal | 81,9 | 83,2 | 77,3* |
| Mildly depressed | 11,8 | 11,1 | 14,3 |
| Depressed | 6,3 | 5,7 | 8,3* |
| | 827 | 745 | 1124** |
| Age | |||
| 60–69 yrs | 570 | 493 | 841** |
| 70–79 yrs | 952 | 852 | 1280** |
| 80+ | 1634 | 1503 | 2424 |
| | 337 | 319 | 404** |
| Age | |||
| 60–69 yrs | 328 | 308 | 398** |
| 70–79 yrs | 347 | 328 | 409** |
| 80+ | 355 | 343 | 427** |
| Chronic morbidity | |||
| Hypertension, | 64,5 | 60,0 | 81,8*** |
| | 51,2 | 50,2 | 55,3*** |
| Elevated Total/HDL cholesterol ratio, | 28,5 | 27,8 | 30,8* |
| Elevated triglycerides, 2573 | 44,9 | 44,2 | 47,6*** |
| | |||
| Myocardial infarction | 4,6 | 3,7 | 7,9*** |
| Ischemic heart attack (no infarction) | 12,0 | 10,9 | 16,4** |
| Stroke | 3,8 | 3,4 | 5,7* |
| Cancer | 5,8 | 5,2 | 8,0 |
| Lung disease | 16,6 | 15,6 | 20,5** |
Significance levels: ***: p < 0.01, **: p < 0.05, *: p < 0.10
aChi-square tests were used for non-diabetic vs. diabetic stratum comparisons of categorical variables. T-tests were used for continuous variables
bDyslipidemia refers to any or both: hypercholesterolemia (Total/HDL ratio) and hypertriglyceridemia
Fig. 2Projections of diabetic population size, and prevalence rate in the elderly. Costa Rica: 1996–2025 (Left y-axis refers to population (thousands), represented as solid bars. Right y-axis refers to the prevalence of diabetes in the elderly population (%), represented as a dotted line)
Doubling time of the diabetic elderly population for hypothetical incidence level scenarios
| Scenarios | Diabetic elderly population size in 2025 | Prevalence in 2025 (%) | Doubling time (years) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) | 75% increase | 372,870 | 30 | 12,0 |
| (2) | 50% increase | 351,697 | 29 | 12,5 |
| (3) | 25% increase | 332,472 | 28 | 12,5 |
| (4) | 25% decrease | 298,885 | 26 | 13,0 |
| (5) | 50% decrease | 284,128 | 26 | 13,0 |
| (6) | 75% decrease | 270,519 | 25 | 13,5 |
Fig. 3Projected annualized mean costs of hospitalization and outpatient consultations of the Costa Rican elderly population under the assumption of linear growth of diabetes prevalence (2011 USD)
Fig. 4Forecast of total life expectancy at birth based on all-cause mortality. Costa Rica: 1980–2035
Fig. 5Forecast of hypothetical total life expectancy removing diabetes as a cause of death. Costa Rica: 1980–2035
Forecast of total life expectancy at age 60 (95% CI). Costa Rica: 2025 and 2035
| Forecast | 2025 | 2035 |
|---|---|---|
| (1) | 24,33 (24,28-24,38) | 24,97 (24,90-25,04) |
| (2) | 24,48 (24,79-24,89) | 25,54 (25,47-25,61) |
| (3) | 23,73 (23,68-23,77) | 24,37 (24,30-24,43) |
| (1)–(3) Years of life lost to diabetes | 0,602 (0,600-0,605) | 0,597 (0,592-0,603) |