Literature DB >> 34007599

Trends and Disparities in Quality of Diabetes Care in the US: The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1999-2016.

Shweta Kamat1, Yolene Gousse1, Jagannath Muzumdar1, Anna Gu1.   

Abstract

Objectives: To examine trends and disparities in the quality of diabetes care among US adults with diabetes.
Methods: Individuals aged 20 years or older with diabetes from NHANES (1999-2016) were included in the study. Quality indicators for diabetes care included Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) < 8%, Blood Pressure (BP) < 130/80 mm Hg, Low-Density Lipoprotein (LDL-C) < 100 mg/dL, triglycerides < 150 mg/dL, receiving eye and foot examinations in the past year, and meeting with a diabetes educator in the past year.
Results: A total of 7,521 adults with diabetes were identified. During the 18-year study period, significant improvements in diabetes care were observed in the overall study sample. Adjusted regression analyses showed that compared with their White counterparts, Blacks were more likely to have received eye (OR=1.37; P=0.01) and foot (OR=1.42;P=0.01) examinations and met a diabetes educator (OR=1.40;P<0.01) over the past year. However, Blacks were significantly less likely to achieve treatment goals for HbA1c (OR=0.77, P=0.02), BP (OR=0.75, P<0.01), LDL-C (OR=0.68, P<0.01). Hispanics in general had suboptimal healthcare utilization for diabetes but the Hispanic-white disparities in diabetes care outcomes were attenuated after controlling for patient sociodemographic, clinical and utilization characteristics. Overall, suboptimal quality of diabetes care were particularly prominent among adults without health insurance and those with lower educational attainment. Conclusions: In the United States, despite persistent efforts, racial disparities in quality of diabetes care still persist. Lack of health insurance and lower socioeconomic status are among the strongest predictors of poor quality of diabetes care. These findings provide valuable information in developing policies and practices to promote racial equity in diabetes care. © Individual authors.

Entities:  

Keywords:  diabetes; epidemiology; quality and outcomes; race and ethnicity

Year:  2019        PMID: 34007599      PMCID: PMC8051907          DOI: 10.24926/iip.v10i4.2064

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Innov Pharm        ISSN: 2155-0417


Introduction

Diabetes mellitus (diabetes) is one of the most prevalent chronic disorders in the United States (US). Based on National Diabetes Statistics Report of 2017, 30.2 million (12.2%) US adults have diabetes (1). It is a leading risk factor for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD), heart failure, and microvascular complications. At present, diabetes is the seventh leading cause of death in the US and the rates of the disease have been steadily increasing over the past two decades (2,3). Over time, uncontrolled diabetes can lead to kidney failure and diseases of the lower limbs and feet. Given that there is no cure for diabetes, prevention and disease management are the two key approaches to lessening the morbidity and mortality associated with diabetes. The control of risk factors for diabetes care has improved but considerable gaps prevail between guideline recommendations and quality of care in the U.S. (2,3), especially among certain patient groups. Clinical guidelines have been established for diabetes management and control of its risk factors to increase life expectancy (4). More specifically the guidelines emphasize on the management of atherosclerotic disease to encompass the prophylactic use of aspirin, control of hypertension and hyperlipidemia, and smoking cessation. Furthermore, the guidelines also recommend the prevention and treatment of macrovascular diseases. The latter include early detection and treatment for retinopathy and nephropathy, routine food care, lifestyle modifications, treatment intensification and patient education for self-management of diabetes (4). To obtain a better understanding of the trends in quality of diabetes care and potential disparities among patient subgroups, we systematically analyzed the latest available data from a nationally representative sample.

Methods

Study participants

The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) is conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS). Survey respondents were selected using a complex, stratified, multistage probability sampling design of the US noninstitutionalized civilian population (5). Since 1999, NHANES has been implemented as a continuous, cross-sectional annual survey, with data publicly released in 2-year cycles. Surveys data are gathered through detailed in-person home interviews, followed by standardized physical examinations conducted in mobile examination centers, and laboratory tests using blood and urine specimens provided by participants during the physical examination. The overall participant response rate ranged from 61.3% to 84% for interviews, and 68.5% to 80% for examinations at mobile examination centers (MECs) for each survey cycle from 1999 to 2016. The surveys were reviewed and approved by the NCHS Institutional Review Board (IRB) and informed consent was obtained from participants.

Definition of diabetes

Diabetes was defined if one or more of the following conditions were met: 1) a positive response to one or more of the following questions: “Other than during pregnancy, have you ever been told by a doctor that you have diabetes?”, “Are you now taking insulin?”, “Are you now taking diabetic pills to lower your blood sugar?”; 2) diabetes medication(s) reported and brought to examination by the interviewee; 3) fasting plasma glucose ≥ 7mmol/L; 4) glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) ≥ 6.5% (6,7). All patients with diabetes aged 20 years and older at the time of the survey were included in this analysis.

Predictor variables

Race and ethnicity were self-reported and were grouped into four categories: whites, blacks, Hispanics, and others. Health insurance status is determined by response to the question “Are you covered by health insurance or some other kind of healthcare plan?” Participants with an affirmative answer were categorized into “insured” and negative answer “uninsured”. Socioeconomic status (SES) was measured using self-reported education and family income of the participant. Education categories included were “< high school,” “high school graduate,” “some college”, and “college graduate or above”. Poverty levels were computed from a ratio of family income to poverty threshold: Poverty Income Ratio (PIR). Values were grouped as “<100% PIR,” “100-299% PIR,” “300-499% PIR” and “≥ 500% PIR.”

Outcome variables

Glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) is the primary outcome measure used for monitoring the average blood glucose concentration in individuals with diabetes. The existence of hypertension as a co-morbidity of diabetes is damaging because of the negative health impact the two conditions have on cardiovascular events, neuropathy, retinopathy, and nephropathy (8). Diabetic dyslipidemia, characterized by high plasma triglyceride concentration, high Low-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol (LDL-C) and low High-Density Lipoprotein (HDL) concentration is another major risk factor for cardiovascular diseases in diabetes. Considering the risk factors for diabetes, we assessed the quality of care for diabetes and included the following quality indicators: HbA1c < 8%, Blood Pressure (BP) < 130/80 mmHg, Low-Density Lipoprotein (LDL-C) < 100 mg/dL, triglycerides < 150 mg/dL, receipt of eye in the past year, foot examinations in the past year, and meeting with a diabetes educator in the past year. HbA1c was examined in this analysis as both continuous and binary variables. A reasonable goal of <7% is defined by American Diabetes Association (ADA) for nonpregnant adults. However, ADA recommends a less stringent goal of < 8% based on variation in life expectancies, number of co-morbid conditions, and duration of diabetes (9). Glycemic control of <8% was added in response to previous studies that reported older adults with diabetes are less likely to benefit from stringent HbA1c management (10). For this study, HbA1c of >8% was considered suitable for uncontrolled diabetes taking into account this variability. Mean systolic and diastolic blood pressure (BP) were determined per NHANES reporting guidelines. Up to 3 BP readings were obtained and used to calculate a mean systolic BP and a mean diastolic BP for each individual. A detailed description of the procedures for BP measurement in NHANES has been published elsewhere (11). Hypertension control was defined as SBP < 130 mm Hg and DBP < 80 mm Hg(12). The 2013 American College of Cardiology (ACC)/American Heart Association (AHA) guidelines define low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) goal of < 100 mg/dL and a goal of < 150 mg/dL for triglycerides recommended for patients with diabetes (13). Total cholesterol and HDL-C were measured directly through NHANES data collection. LDL-C levels were estimated for people who fasted properly (for ≥ 8 hours and < 24 hours) using the following equation [LDL cholesterol = (total cholesterol) – (HDL cholesterol) – (triglycerides/5)]. Estimates for the prevalence of achieving valid LDL-C was based on the fasting sample only. Receipt of eye examination was evaluated based on participants’ response to a question “When was the last time you had an eye exam in which the pupils were dilated?”. If participants reported receiving an eye exam within the past year then eye exam was coded as “yes”. Respondents were considered to have had foot examination if they responded once or more to the question “During the past 12 months, about how many times has a doctor or other health professional checked feet for any sores or irritations?”. Meeting with a diabetes educator in the past year was based on the question: “When was the last time you saw a diabetes nurse educator, dietician, or nutritionist?” and was coded as “Yes” for the response was “less than one year” and “no” for “more than one year”.

Covariates

Respondents’ age, gender, marital status, smoking status, Body Mass Index (BMI), utilization of diabetes medications, statin use and history of physician-diagnosed cardiovascular disease (CVD) (including stroke, congestive heart failure, angina pectoris, myocardial infarction, or coronary artery disease) were obtained through a questionnaire. Hypertension was defined if one or more of the following conditions were met: 1) systolic BP ≥ 140 mm Hg; 2) diastolic BP ≥ 90 mm Hg; and an affirmative response to “Are you currently taking medication to lower your blood pressure?” (12). Chronic kidney disease (CKD) was defined as either an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) <60 mL-1 min-1 1.73 m[2] or a urinary albumin concentration of > 200 mg g-1 urinary creatinine, where eGFR was estimated using the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiological Collaboration equation (14). Serum creatinine levels from 1999-2000 and 2005-2006 were calibrated as per NHANES documentation (15). Albuminuria was defined as Albumin-to-Creatinine ratio > 30 mg g-1 (16).

Statistical Methods

Descriptive statistics were used to assess the differences in sociodemographic and clinical characteristics. Appropriate sampling weights were used to account for differential probabilities of selection and the complex multistage sampling design. Additional sample weights were used to account for non-response and missing data. Taylor linearization was used for variance estimation and domain analysis was used for subpopulation analyses because selection of subpopulations may be unrelated to sample design. Trends in the performance of quality indicators for diabetes care were assessed with SAS survey procedures (PROC SURVEYREG and PROC SURVEYLOGISITC). To examine the factors affecting the quality of diabetes care, adjusted logistic regression models were constructed with quality indicators as the dependent variable and odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals were estimated. All the statistical analyses were conducted using SAS (version 9.4.3, SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA) with a level of significance set at 0.05.

Results

A total of 7,521 adults with diabetes were identified and included in the analysis. A significant rise in the proportion of adults with some college education (25.8% to 32.4%; Ptrend< 0.001) and individuals who were college graduates (14.6% to 21.3%;Ptrend< 0.001) was observed during the study period (). During the same time, the percentage of whites decreased from 63.8% to 58.2% (Ptrend =0.01). Variables Overall SE 1999-2004 SE 2005-2010 SE 2011-2016 SE P % (95% CI) % (95% CI) % (95% CI) % (95% CI) n=7521 n=1960 n=2663 n=2898 Age (years) 20-39 9.3 (8.5-10.1) 0.4 9.9 (7.6-12.1) 1.1 9.3 (8.1-10.4) 0.6 7.8 (6.8-10.1) 0.6 0.03 40-59 39.4 (37.8-41.0) 0.8 40.7 (38.0-43.4) 1.4 39.4 (36.7-42.1) 1.4 39.7 (35.8-41.3) 1.4 0.06 ≥60 51.2 (49.5-52.9) 0.9 49.3 (45.9-52.7) 1.7 51.2 (48.3-54.1) 1.5 52.4 (49.7-55.0) 1.3 <0.01 Female 48.8 (47.2-50.3) 0.8 49.0 (46.7-51.2) 1.1 49.5 (46.7-52.3) 1.4 48.1 (45.5-50.7) 1.3 0.57 Educational Status < High school 27.7 (26.1-29.2) 0.8 34.2 (27.4-36.9) 1.4 27.3 (22.1-30.4) 1.1 23.0 (20.9-25.4) 1.4 <0.001 High school graduate 24.7 (23.1-26.3) 0.8 25.3 (22.4-28.1) 1.4 26.2 (23.0-29.3) 1.6 23.3 (20.9-25.4) 1.2 0.19 Some college 29.2 (27.5-30.8) 0.8 25.8 (22.9-28.6) 1.5 28.8 (25.0-30.7) 1.4 32.4 (29.8-34.9) 1.3 <0.001 College education or above 18.3 (16.7-19.9) 0.8 14.6 (12.3-17.0) 1.2 17.7 (15.1-20.0) 1.2 21.3 (18.1-24.2) 1.5 <0.001 Poverty-to-income ratio <100% 17.2 (15.8-18.7) 0.8 17.3 (14.7-19.9) 1.3 14.6 (12.2-16.6) 1.1 19.6 (16.9-22.2) 1.4 0.08 100-299% 42.9 (41.1-44.6) 0.9 44.9 (41.2-48.5) 1.8 44.5 (42.1-47.6) 1.4 39.9 (37.1-42.8) 1.4 0.04 300-499% 22.2 (15.8-18.7) 0.8 22.0 (19.3-24.6) 1.3 21.2 (18.6-23.5) 1.2 23.3 (20.3-26.1) 1.5 0.33 ≥500% 17.6 (15.9-19.3) 0.9 15.7 (12.6-18.8) 1.6 19.6 (17.3-21.9) 1.2 17.1 (14.0-20.3) 1.6 0.57 Race and ethnicity Whites 61.0 (57.9-64.1) 1.6 63.8 (58.4-68.9) 2.7 62.5 (57.0-67.8) 2.7 58.2 (53.0-63.4) 2.6 0.01 Blacks 15.9 (14.0-17.5) 1.0 15.3 (12.0-18.5) 1.7 16.8 (13.8-17.6) 1.5 15.6 (12.2-18.8) 1.7 0.98 Hispanics 15.1 (12.7-17.5) 1.2 13.9 (9.1-18.9) 2.5 14.0 (10.4-17.6) 1.8 16.6 (12.6-20.5) 2.0 <0.001 Others 7.9 (6.7-9.0) 0.6 6.9 (4.6-9.1) 1.2 6.6 (4.9-8.3) 0.9 9.5 (7.6-11.5) 1.0 0.06 Insured 87.8 (86.8-88.8) 0.5 87.9 (86.1-89.8) 0.9 87.3 (85.3-89.2) 1.0 88.2 (86.8-89.6) 0.7 0.73 BMI, kg/m <25 12.7 (11.5-13.9) 0.6 15.0 (12.0-18.1) 1.5 12.8 (11.2-14.4) 0.8 11.7 (9.5-13.0) 0.9 0.02 25-<30 26.7 (25.3-28.1) 0.7 30.1 (27.0-33.2) 1.6 25.6 (23.2-28.1) 1.2 26.1 (23.5-27.8) 1.1 0.14 ≥30 60.5 (58.6-62.4) 1.0 54.8 (50.6-58.8) 2.1 61.5 (58.5-64.4) 1.5 62.1 (59.9-66.0) 1.5 <0.01 Current smoker 17.1 (16.0-18.1) 0.5 19.7 (17.6-21.8) 1.1 17.0 (15.3-18.7) 0.9 15.5 (13.9-17.2) 0.9 <0.01 Statin user 57.6 (55.9-59.4) 0.9 28.4 (25.3-31.5) 1.0 46.3 (44.1-48.5) 1.1 50.1 (46.6-53.7) 1.8 <0.001 Diabetes medication Oral medications 55.0 (53.2-56.9) 0.8 55.8 (52.3-59.2) 1.2 56.8 (51.4-58.4) 1.5 57.9 (52.1-60.1) 1.3 0.001 Insulin 13.2 (11.7-14.1) 0.5 15.8 (12.8-18.9) 1.3 12.9 (10.9-14.8) 0.8 11.5 (9.8-13.1) 0.8 0.01 Oral medications and insulin 12.5 (11.4-13.6) 0.5 10.4 (7.6-13.0) 1.1 10.7 (11.9-15.4) 0.7 10.5 (11.1-14.1) 0.8 0.21 HbA1c<8% 75.3 (74.1-77.0) 0.8 72.1 (70.2-75.4) 1.3 73.6 (72.0-77.3) 1.3 79.6 (77.8-81.4) 1.3 <0.001 Blood pressure control <140/90 mm Hg 71.5 (69.9-73.0) 0.8 67.4 (64.7-70.1) 1.4 71.8 (69.5-74.1) 1.2 73.6 (70.9-76.4) 1.4 0.01 <130/80 mm Hg 48.6 (46.8-50.3) 0.8 42.3 (38.6-46.1) 1.8 50.2 (47.5-53.0) 1.3 51.1 (48.4-53.7) 1.4 0.03 Lipid profile LDL-C ≤100 mg/dL 46.6 (44.0-49.2) 1.3 35.0 (30.1-40.0) 2.5 50.6 (46.7-54.6) 2.0 51.4 (47.0-55.8) 2.2 <0.001 Triglycerides ≤ 150mg/dL 53.2 (50.3-56.2) 1.5 44.3 (39.9-48.6) 2.2 54.5 (50.5-58.5) 2.0 58.4 (51.4-65.5) 2.5 <0.001 Health services use in the past year Foot exam 71.5 (69.4-73.7) 1.1 71.4 (68.7-74.0) 1.3 71.8 (68.5-75.0) 1.6 0.35 Eye exam 63.8 (61.1-65.8) 1.2 63.7 (60.5-66.9) 1.6 63.0 (59.6-66.5) 1.7 0.76 Visited diabetes educator 36.9 (34.9-39.0) 1.0 38.5 (35.3-41.7) 1.6 34.8 (32.4-37.1) 1.2 0.06 Comorbidities Hypertension 64.8 (63.1-66.5) 0.8 61.3 (58.3-64.4) 1.5 65.8 (62.9-68.6) 1.5 65.9 (63.2-68.7) 1.4 <0.001 Chronic kidney disease 22.4 (21.3-23.5) 0.6 21.6 (19.5-23.7) 1.1 22.3 (20.3-24.3) 1.0 22.9 (21.2-24.6) 0.9 0.01 Cardiovascular diseases 23.3 (21.9-24.7) 0.7 23.7 (20.4-27.1) 1.7 23.9 (21.7-26.1) 1.1 22.6 (20.7-24.4) 0.9 0.47 Albuminuria 27.3 (25.9-28.7) 0.7 30.9 (28.8-33.1) 1.1 27.0 (25.0-29.1) 1.0 25.4 (22.7-28.0) 1.3 <0.01 HbA1c = glycated haemoglobin; LDL-C = Low Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol; CI = confidence interval; SE = standard error. Data not available at the time of the study. Improvements were observed in meeting the HbA1c goals in many patient subgroups, such as individuals with less than high school education (66.8% to 71.2%, Ptrend< 0.001), those with a PIR of <100% (67.8% to 71.5%,Ptrend=0.02), insured participants (from 75.4% to 82.5%;Ptrend<0.001) and adults taking oral diabetes medications (72.6% to 84%;Ptrend<0.001) ( Significant increase in achieving BP goals were noted for whites (44.5% to 53.8%; Ptrend=0.01), blacks (43.8% to 53.3%;Ptrend=0.03), as well as for adults with insurance (47.0% to 57.4%;Ptrend< 0.001) (. Variables Overall (n=7521) 1999-2004 (n=1960) 2005-2010 (n=2663) 2011-2016 (n=2898) P All patients 75.4 (0.8) 71.9 (1.4) 74.0 (1.2) 79.9 (1.4) <0.001 Race and ethnicity Whites 79.5 (1.0) 76.3 (2.0) 82.0 (3.0) 85.7 (3.0) <0.01 Blacks 71.3 (1.1) 65.3 (3.0) 70.7 (1.6) 75.5 (1.6) 0.03 Hispanics 64.1 (1.6) 59.3 (3.4) 68.6 (3.0) 67.5 (2.4) 0.39 Others 73.8 (2.8) 70.5 (1.8) 78.5 (1.3) 79.7 (1.8) 0.45 Education Less than high school 72.6 (1.2) 66.8 (2.1) 70.6 (1.8) 71.2 (2.1) <0.001 High school graduate 73.3 (1.4) 70.0 (2.2) 72.0 (2.2) 76.2 (2.5) 0.09 Some college 77.6 (1.3) 72.5 (2.8) 79.0 (1.9) 78.0 (2.0) 0.12 College graduate or above 84.7 (1.7) 83.9 (3.5) 84.1 (2.7) 86.0 (2.6) 0.21 Poverty-to-income ratio (PIR) <100% 70.1 (1.4) 67.8 (3.3) 69.9 (2.4) 71.5 (2.0) 0.02 100%-299% 74.0 (1.1) 72.0 (2.2) 70.1 (1.4) 78.2 (2.0) 0.12 300%-499% 76.3 (1.8) 71.8 (3.8) 81.9 (2.3) 79.8 (2.0) 0.56 ≥500% 79.5 (1.9) 73.9 (3.2) 83.8 (2.8) 83.6 (3.5) 0.77 Insurance Insured 78.3 (2.2) 75.4 (1.5) 76.7 (1.2) 82.5 (1.3) <0.001 Uninsured 61.9 (0.8) 57.2 (3.1) 67.9 (2.9) 59.6 (3.6) 0.11 Diabetes medication Oral medications only 80.0 (0.9) 72.6 (1.9) 80.9 (1.3) 84.0 (1.4) <0.001 Insulin only 58.0 (2.2) 54.9 (3.4) 56.2 (4.2) 61.1 (3.5) 0.32 Oral medications and insulin 51.6 (2.4) 49.6 (4.8) 46.3 (3.8) 59.8 (3.4) 0.21 None 85.6 (1.1) 84.6 (1.9) 89.3 (1.6) 82.7 (2.0) 0.32 Statin use Yes 79.2 (1.2) 74.1 (2.7) 80.2 (1.4) 86.7 (2.4) 0.01 No 70.2 (1.1) 69.3 (1.6) 71.5 (1.8) 70.3 (2.3) 0.44 Co-morbidities Hypertension 75.1 (1.6) 74.5 (1.5) 76.2 (1.1) 76.7 (1.5) 0.16 Chronic kidney disease 72.4 (1.0) 69.2 (2.7) 76.2 (1.9) 69.6 (2.4) 0.52 Cardiovascular disease 70.5 (1.5) 70.7 (1.3) 68.0 (1.4) 71.8 (1.5) 0.70 Albuminuria 65.3 (1.4) 63.4 (2.5) 63.9 (2.0) 62.7 (2.4) 0.33 Data are presented as percentages and Standard Error (SE) Variables Overall (n=7521) 1999-2004 (n=1960) 2005-2010 (n=2663) 2011-2016 (n=2898) P All patients 51.3 (0.8) 42.3 (1.8) 48.8 (1.3) 51.2 (1.4) <0.001 Race and ethnicity Whites 51.4 (1.3) 44.5 (2.7) 51.8 (1.9) 53.8 (2.1) 0.01 Blacks 44.4 (1.5) 43.8 (1.5) 49.6 (1.9) 53.3 (2.2) 0.03 Hispanics 40.5 (1.2) 36.8 (2.6) 42.8 (1.7) 40.7 (2.1) 0.26 Others 53.3 (1.6) 41.2 (2.9) 52.6 (2.0) 59.8 (2.3) <0.001 Education Less than high school 44.2 (1.3) 37.1 (2.2) 44.4 (2.0) 47.8 (2.3) <0.001 High school graduate 46.1 (1.5) 42.4 (3.0) 46.4 (2.2) 48.6 (2.7) 0.18 Some college 50.2 (1.6) 44.5 (3.3) 53.4 (2.5) 50.8 (2.4) 0.42 College graduate or above 55.4 (2.2) 50.6 (4.7) 60.4 (4.0) 54.2 (3.1) 0.28 Poverty-to-income ratio (PIR) <100% 44.5 (1.6) 38.5 (2.8) 46.0 (3.2) 47.1 (2.4) 0.02 100%-299% 46.5 (1.2) 40.0 (2.4) 48.9 (1.6) 50.1 (2.0) <0.001 300%-499% 54.0 (2.0) 49.4 (5.1) 54.9 (3.9) 55.7 (3.8) 0.45 ≥500% 50.0 (2.6) 44.5 (1.9) 54.1 (1.9) 50.6 (2.0) 0.75 Insurance Insured 54.3 (1.9) 47.0 (2.0) 54.0 (1.5) 57.4 (1.4) <0.001 Uninsured 45.6 (0.9) 46.8 (4.6) 45.5 (2.8) 44.6 (3.0) 0.35 Statin use Yes 57.9 (1.4) 42.9 (3.6) 56.2 (2.0) 61.9 (2.3) 0.03 No 45.8 (1.2) 42.1 (2.1) 42.1 (1.7) 47.3 (2.4) 0.07 Diabetes Medication Oral medications only 51.0 (1.2) 45.6 (2.1) 54.0 (2.1) 50.4 (2.0) 0.22 Insulin 57.4 (2.5) 52.2 (4.5) 59.0 (3.8) 59.0 (4.4) 0.47 Oral medication and insulin 54.4 (2.3) 47.8 (5.3) 51.6 (3.1) 58.8 (3.3) <0.01 None 47.8 (2.0) 47.2 (1.4) 44.3 (3.7) 49.5 (2.9) 0.18 Co-morbidities Hypertension 31.5 (0.9) 22.8 (1.8) 34.2 (1.2) 34.4 (1.6) <0.01 Chronic Kidney Disease 37.9 (1.4) 30.9 (3.5) 41.7 (2.1) 38.7 (2.0) 0.29 Cardiovascular disease 49.4 (1.1) 38.2 (2.9) 45.9 (2.1) 50.4 (2.7) 0.05 Albuminuria 31.3 (1.4) 28.3 (2.8) 37.2 (2.1) 28.3 (2.2) 0.08 Data are presented as percentages and Standard Error (SE) The overall rates of achieving LDL-C and triglycerides goals were 46.6% ( and 53.0% ( respectively. The rate of meeting LDL-C goal improved significantly for whites (34.6% to 56.9%; Ptrend<0.001), blacks (27.9% to 45.5%; Ptrend=0.02), insured (41.7% to 54.0% ;Ptrend=0.02), and statin users (45.7% to 72.1%;Ptrend<0.01). (Significant improvement in triglyceride control was observed among individuals with PIR <100% (32.0% to 51.0%; Ptrend=0.01), insured individuals (47.0% to 60.8% Ptrend=0.02), statin users (49.5% to 64.2%; Ptrend=0.02) and for those with certain comorbidities: hypertension (45.4% to 59.5%; Ptrend=0.03), chronic kidney disease (46.4% to 64.7%; Ptrend<0.001), and cardiovascular disease (40.1% to 55.9%;Ptrend=0.02) (. Variables Overall (n=2750) 1999-2002 (n=454) 2003-2006 (n=543) 2007-2010 (n=910) 2011-2014 (n=843) P All patients 46.6 (1.3) 31.9 (3.4) 44.2 (2.7) 50.5 (2.4) 52.5 (2.2) <0.001 Race and ethnicity Whites 49.7 (1.4) 34.6(5.0) 45.4 (3.6) 55.5 (3.3) 56.9 (3.3) <0.001 Blacks 40.5 (5.0) 27.9(0.8) 39.7 (1.7) 40.6 (1.4) 45.5 (1.6) 0.02 Hispanics 36.6 (4.0) 24.7(2.2) 37.6 (2.1) 41.4 (3.6) 33.9 (4.6) 0.48 Others 47.5 (2.4) 33.8(3.2) 40.5 (3.9) 51.3 (2.8) 52.6 (3.7) 0.12 Education Less than high school 45.2 (0.8) 29.5 (1.2) 42.8 (1.6) 48.6 (1.6) 49.4 (1.4) <0.01 High school graduate 46.5 (1.0) 34.8 (3.0) 41.7 (1.7) 57.8 (2.5) 46.1 (1.9) 0.24 Some college 47.6 (1.1) 24.9 (1.5) 46.7 (1.7) 47.9 (1.7) 57.3 (2.1) 0.03 College graduate or above 55.6 (0.8) 48.0 (1.7) 47.8 (1.8) 50.9 (3.0) 52.4 (2.3) 0.19 Poverty-to-income ratio (PIR) <100% 37.4 (0.6) 20.4 (1.3) 32.7 (1.2) 41.6 (1.4) 45.6 (2.2) <0.01 100%-299% 46.3 (1.3) 31.3 (1.2) 39.3 (1.3) 48.6 (1.7) 50.7 (1.7) 0.03 300%-499% 50.7 (1.0) 40.2 (2.6) 47.5 (1.9) 55.9 (2.0) 59.6 (3.0) 0.01 ≥500% 48.9 (1.0) 47.5 (2.5) 44.9 (2.4) 49.6 (3.2) 53.7 (2.7) 0.29 Insurance Insured 48.3 (0.5) 41.7 (0.8) 47.3 (0.9) 53.5 (1.2) 54.0 (1.2) 0.02 Uninsured 35.1 (1.3) 29.1 (1.1) 32.3 (1.7) 35.7 (1.9) 33.6 (1.9) 0.95 Statin use Yes 68.6 (1.0) 45.7 (2.9) 65.9 (1.5) 71.3 (2.0) 72.1 (2.2) <0.01 No 30.9 (1.2) 28.0 (0.9) 33.0 (0.8) 30.2 (0.9) 32.4 (1.7) 0.34 Diabetes Medication Oral medications only 52.5 (1.5) 34.8 (0.8) 50.0 (1.2) 53.8 (1.6) 59.6 (1.5) <0.001 Insulin 55.3 (0.7) 24.3 (2.6) 64.9 (2.5) 59.0 (3.9) 51.1 (4.1) 0.10 Oral medication and insulin 51.7 (0.7) 37.2 (1.3) 53.6 (2.8) 60.8 (3.3) 60.4 (4.6) 0.24 None 39.2 (0.9) 27.9 (2.6) 38.1 (1.2) 42.1 (2.1) 40.1 (1.9) 0.48 Co-morbidities Hypertension 51.7 (0.8) 33.4 (0.9) 50.7 (0.9) 56.1 (1.4) 56.4 (1.5) 0.47 Chronic Kidney Disease 53.6 (1.3) 38.0 (1.2) 51.9 (1.9) 60.6 (2.3) 61.9 (2.1) 0.16 Cardiovascular disease 58.4 (0.8) 41.2 (1.1) 49.1 (2.4) 65.2 (1.6) 63.7 (2.7) 0.24 Albuminuria 48.8 (1.3) 33.7 (0.8) 48.5 (0.9) 48.9 (1.3) 59.1 (1.1) 0.14 Data are presented as percentages and Standard Error (SE) Variables Overall (n=2750) 1999-2002 (n=454) 2003-2006 (n=543) 2007-2010 (n=910) 2011-2014 (n=843) P All patients 53.0 (1.5) 45.4 (2.9) 47.6 (2.9) 55.8 (2.1) 58.8 (3.5) <0.001 Race and ethnicity Whites 50.8 (1.6) 43.0 (1.1) 47.5 (1.4) 54.6 (1.5) 56.9 (2.3) 0.02 Blacks 72.4 (0.8) 62.4 (1.5) 68.6 (1.9) 72.9 (2.2) 79.9 (2.5) <0.01 Hispanics 47.8 (0.8) 49.6 (3.0) 42.7 (2.2) 45.9 (1.9) 51.5 (1.9) 0.53 Others 47.5 (0.5) 41.9 (3.2) 45.5 (1.1) 56.0 (4.0) 54.8 (3.4) 0.15 Education Less than high school 50.2 (0.8) 44.4 (3.6) 47.2 (3.4) 48.1 (3.7) 58.7 (4.1) 0.03 High school graduate 51.8 (0.9) 45.5 (5.7) 47.0 (4.5) 57.5 (3.0) 57.8 (4.4) 0.02 Some college 53.0 (1.0) 38.9 (1.1) 49.2 (1.8) 55.7 (1.6) 59.0 (2.8) <0.01 College graduate or above 59.0 (0.9) 58.6 (1.9) 50.8 (2.2) 65.4 (3.0) 59.6 (3.1) 0.64 Poverty-to-income ratio (PIR) <100% 47.8 (0.7) 32.0 (1.3) 40.1 (1.6) 49.0 (1.2) 51.0 (2.5) 0.01 100%-299% 54.5 (1.3) 50.9 (1.5) 49.5 (1.8) 54.7 (1.4) 60.9 (2.0) 0.14 300%-499% 51.0 (1.0) 41.2 (1.6) 45.0 (2.1) 58.5 (2.0) 51.3 (2.7) 0.12 ≥500% 57.0 (1.1) 52.8 (1.9) 60.4 (2.2) 66.9 (3.6) 68.4 (4.3) 0.02 Insurance Insured 58.2 (0.5) 47.0 (0.9) 49.3 (1.1) 56.9 (1.1) 60.8 (1.6) 0.02 Uninsured 45.0 (1.6) 42.5 (2.2) 36.7 (1.7) 50.5 (1.8) 49.2 (1.8) 0.54 Statin use Yes 56.1 (1.1) 49.5 (3.0) 54.5 (1.2) 57.1 (1.3) 64.2 (1.2) 0.02 No 51.2 (1.0) 43.8 (1.1) 46.8 (1.0) 52.6 (1.1) 51.4 (1.3) 0.13 Diabetes Medication Oral medications only 52.3 (1.5) 40.9 (0.9) 46.5 (1.3) 53.5 (1.3) 61.6 (2.1) 0.03 Insulin 67.1 (0.7) 69.5 (1.8) 56.2 (2.7) 61.3 (3.9) 68.0 (4.2) 0.55 Oral medication and insulin 51.5 (0.6) 37.8 (1.2) 43.5 (2.9) 52.3 (3.4) 51.9 (3.4) 0.50 None 54.9 (1.0) 50.9 (2.5) 49.4 (2.1) 59.8 (2.4) 55.9 (2.4) 0.44 Co-morbidities Hypertension 53.4 (1.3) 45.4 (1.0) 48.2 (1.1) 54.9 (1.1) 59.5 (1.6) 0.03 Chronic Kidney Disease 56.3 (1.4) 46.4 (1.6) 56.3 (1.9) 61.3 (1.5) 64.7 (2.2) <0.001 Cardiovascular disease 52.2 (0.9) 40.1 (1.5) 49.1 (1.7) 55.8 (1.5) 55.9 (1.9) 0.02 Albuminuria 46.9 (1.4) 36.9 (1.0) 43.7 (1.1) 52.6 (1.2) 50.4 (1.5) 0.10 Data are presented as percentages and Standard Error (SE) presents adjusted results evaluating the impact of sociodemographic and clinical characteristics on quality of diabetes care. Older (≥ 60 years) individuals with diabetes were 74.7% more likely to have controlled HbA1c levels and 36% less likely to meet BP goal when compared with their younger con. Compared to patients with less than high school education, college graduates were 41.5% more likely to achieve HbA1c goal (P=0.03). The likelihood of achieving HbA1c and BP goals was found to be lower among blacks, Hispanics and individuals without insurance. Patients taking oral diabetes medications were 2.4 times more likely to have achieved HbA1c goal compared to untreated (P<0.001). Variables HbA1c <8% BP <130/80 mm/Hg LDL-C <100 mg/dL Triglycerides <150 mg/dL) Receipt of eye examination Receipt of foot examination Visited a diabetes educator Age (ref: 20 to 39) 40 to 59 1.08 (0.76-1.54) 0.97 (0.71-1.32) 0.70 (0.42-1.19) 0.61 (0.39-1.26) 1.62 (0.99-1.98) 1.33 (0.91-1.94) 1.05 (0.90-1.26) ≥60 1.75 (1.16-2.63) 0.64 (0.46-0.89) 1.27 (1.01-1.58) 0.76 (0.56-0.99) 2.51 (1.48-4.26) 1.63 (1.03-2.58) 1.28 (1.43-1.31) Gender Women vs. men 0.57 (0.50-0.66) 1.09 (0.92-1.29) 0.66 (0.51-0.84) 0.91 (0.71-1.16) 1.22 (0.97-1.54) 1.14 (0.86-1.51) 1.12 (0.91-1.30) Educational status (ref: < high school) High school graduate 1.01 (0.77-1.23) 1.01 (0.81-1.25) 1.01 (0.67-1.11) 1.11 (0.85-1.45) 1.01 (0.81-1.25) 1.26 (0.95-1.67) 1.08 (0.83-1.39) Some college 1.03 (0.78-1.26) 1.15 (0.93-1.43) 1.40 (0.62-1.42) 1.23 (0.93-1.61) 1.15 (0.93-1.43) 1.29 (0.93-1.77) 1.18 (0.90-1.53) College graduate or above 1.42 (1.03-1.96) 1.25 (0.94-1.68) 1.43 (1.14-2.39) 1.58 (1.05-2.39) 1.25 (1.10-1.68) 1.85 (1.15-2.97) 1.38 (1.10-1.65) Poverty income-ratio (ref: <100%) 100%-299% 1.07 (0.84-1.37) 0.94 (0.77-1.14) 1.29 (0.90-1.86) 1.31 (0.96-1.78) 1.28 (0.98-1.59) 0.94 (0.71-1.25) 1.05 (0.81-1.35) 300%-499% 1.30 (0.62-1.24) 1.03 (0.77-1.31) 1.30 (1.00-2.10) 1.00 (0.68-1.45) 1.33 (1.11-2.11) 0.97 (0.67-1.41) 1.09 (0.85-1.40) ≥500% 1.60 (0.64-1.34) 1.13 (0.58-1.08) 1.41 (0.80-2.50) 1.32 (0.86-2.12) 1.40 (0.84-1.97) 1.40 (0.90-2.18) 1.33 (1.06-1.54) Race and ethnicity (ref: whites) Blacks 0.77 (0.63-0.96) 0.75 (0.63-0.89) 0.68 (0.51-0.90) 3.61 (2.63-4.95) 1.37 (1.06-1.78) 1.42 (1.07-1.88) 1.40 (1.12-1.75) Hispanics 0.62 (0.49-0.79) 0.52 (0.35-0.72) 0.64 (0.44-0.92) 1.21 (0.88-1.68) 1.05 (0.80-1.38) 0.83 (0.62-0.95) 1.15 (0.91-1.50) Others 0.88 (0.58-1.33) 1.02 (0.77-1.49) 1.23 (0.79-1.94) 0.78 (0.48-1.28) 1.19 (0.82-1.72) 0.97 (0.62-1.51) 0.92 (0.58-1.45) Insurance Uninsured vs. insured 0.56 (0.44-0.72) 0.81 (0.62-0.99) 0.78 (0.58-0.82) 0.74 (0.53-0.85) 0.81 (0.62-0.92) 0.53 (0.38-0.74) 1.04 (0.73-1.55) BMI, kg/m 25-<30 1.06 (0.76-1.46) 1.22 (0.95-1.57) 0.83 (0.56-1.31) 0.56 (0.39-0.80) 0.78 (0.56-1.09) 0.75 (0.51-1.11) 0.94 (0.75-1.25) ≥30 0.84 (0.61-1.17) 1.29 (0.96-1.53) 0.89 (0.59-1.35) 0.50 (0.36-0.71) 0.90 (0.65-1.24) 0.82 (0.54-1.25) 1.12 (1.01-1.34) Current smoker Yes vs. no 0.88 (0.68-1.14) 0.82 (0.73-1.11) 1.07 (0.78-1.47) 0.85 (0.62-1.17) 0.62 (0.48-0.79) 1.29 (0.90-1.86) 0.76 (0.54-1.07) Statin use Yes vs. no 1.19 (0.97-1.47) 1.28 (1.07-1.54) 3.84 (2.89-5.09) 1.15 (0.89-1.48) 1.54 (1.20-1.97) 1.36 (1.03-1.80) 0.86 (0.67-0.95) Diabetes education (ref: none) Oral medications only 2.40 (1.96-2.47) 1.52 (1.27-1.82) 1.64 (1.26-2.17) 0.97 (0.76-1.24) 0.86 (0.56-1.03) 1.32 (0.98-1.45) 2.70 (1.89-3.84) Insulin only 1.60 (1.40-1.80) 0.95 (0.77-1.09) 0.97 (0.80-1.03) 0.92 (0.84-1.09) 1.79 (1.38-2.59) 2.72 (1.86-4.02) 1.37 (0.95-1.66) Oral medications and insulin 1.32 (0.93-1.37) 1.03 (0.89-1.33) 1.13 (0.96-1.26) 1.02 (0.91-1.18) 1.00 (0.92-1.24) 1.20 (0.84-1.03) 1.40 (1.27-1.68) Comorbidities (ref: without comorbidity) Hypertension 0.57 (0.33-0.76) 0.23 (0.19-0.28) 0.89 (0.66-1.35) 0.93 (0.72-1.19) 0.97 (0.78-1.31) 1.15 (0.91-1.46) 0.98 (0.76-1.26) Chronic kidney disease 0.89 (0.70-1.15) 0.95 (0.77-1.16) 1.01 (0.71-1.39) 1.19 (0.88-1.60) 1.04 (0.82-1.29) 1.41 (1.01-1.97) 1.30 (0.99-1.73) Cardiovascular disease 1.02 (0.79-1.31) 1.18 (0.96-1.45) 1.00 (0.72-1.40) 0.87 (0.66-1.15) 1.47 (1.12-1.94) 0.99 (0.68-1.23) 1.20 (0.90-1.49) Albuminuria 0.48 (0.39-0.60) 0.49 (0.41-0.59) 1.11 (0.82-1.49) 0.62 (0.46-0.82) 1.00 (0.73-1.35) 0.92 (0.69-1.23) 1.19 (0.95-1.49) Estimates are statistically significant at P < 0.05. Compared with their younger counterparts, individuals aged 60 year or over were 23.6% less likely to achieve triglycerides goal (P=0.02) but were 26.5% more likely to achieve LDL-C goal. Although blacks were less likely to meet LDL-C goal than whites, the likelihood of achieving triglyceride goal was found to be 3.6 times higher among blacks. The likelihood of meeting guideline recommended triglyceride goal also decreased with elevated BMI. The likelihoods of receiving eye examination, foot examination and meeting with a diabetes educator were substantially higher among older adults. Blacks were 41.9% more likely (P=0.01) and Hispanics 17.3% less likely (P=0.03) than whites to have foot examination over the past year.

Discussion

The current cross-sectional study was based on National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 1999 to 2016 and evaluated trends and disparities in the quality for diabetes care. The results showed an overall improvement in diabetes management during the study period as indicated by the proportion of respondents meeting HbA1c, BP, LDL-C and triglyceride goals. We observed that the prevalence of diabetes increased with lower education, as well as an upward trend in percentage of Hispanics with diabetes over the study period. These changes are likely attributable to inadequate insurance coverage, lack of health knowledge, and resultant suboptimal diabetes preventive care and management, all of which are particularly prevalent among Hispanic populations (3, 16, 17). Over the past decades, numerous efforts have been made nationwide to reduce disparities in diabetes care (2–4, 7) and national treatment guidelines revised toward race-specific treatment paradigms (11,12,15). Despite these efforts, substantial gaps in diabetes treatment and outcomes persist in US populations. Overall, whites were more likely to have achieved most diabetes care goals than minorities. Blacks exhibited normal triglyceride levels that is attributable to higher lipase activity among them (17). There has been a significant increase in the use of statin over the past few decades which is associated with paralleled decrease in LDL-C and triglycerides levels observed in our study. Despitecontinuous innovation in glucose-lowering medications, the overall declining glycemic control may be due to changes in the characteristics of adults with type 2 diabetes and increase in patient cost sharing in U.S. healthcare plans (19). In general, significantly higher rates of uncontrolled BP, LDL-C and triglyceride levels were observed among Hispanics, adults with low SES, uninsured populations, individuals not taking statins or diabetes medications and adults with certain comorbid conditions such as hypertension and cardiovascular disease. Improvement in HbA1c, BP and lipid profile observed during the study period reflects availability of innovative diabetes medications. Yet a substantial proportion of adults with diabetes, particularly blacks and Hispanics were less likely to meet the recommended goals (20–22). Suboptimal insurance coverage and lower socioeconomic status are among the strongest predictors of poor quality of diabetes care. After adjusting for confounders, older adults, whites, individuals with higher educational status, and adults with insurance were more likely to meet the HbA1c goal. In our study, SES had a significant impact on meeting HbA1c, BP and LDL-C goals. Other studies have reported a decline in the proportion of patients with poor BP between 1988-2008; however, SES-related disparities remained (22,23,24). Lack of health insurance and presence of comorbidities were found to be associated with lower rates of eye and foot examination. The reasons for these persistent disparities are complex and further research is needed to understand the mechanism underlying these disparities. In our study, the likelihood of receiving eye checkups increased with age, this is likely attributable to the higher prevalence of diabetes retinopathy among older patients (24). Similarly, older adults were more likely to have their feet checked for sores. Given that the risk of lower extremity amputations increases with age and duration of diabetes, routine foot examination for sores or irritation effectively reduces such risks (25). The greater prevalence of diabetes and diabetic complications among older adults, is also indicative of the higher likelihood of meeting with a diabetes educator, particularly as the disease may become more advanced with older age.

Strengths and Limitations

A strength of this study was the use of a nationally representative sample allowing generalization to the US adult noninstitutionalized population. Health care utilization information and clinical outcomes were assessed using standardized procedures, which allows us to better characterize diabetes management. The nature of NHANES data opens the study to several limitations. This is a serial cross-sectional study with inherent limitations due to observational study design and residual confounding. Respondents were less likely to report their exact income thus resulting in potential misclassification. Insurance was dichotomized as ‘insured’ versus ‘uninsured’ and did not account for specific insurance types. Some important causal relationships such as lifestyle characteristics and quality of diabetes care cannot be examined although educational status and healthcare utilization are shown to be heavily correlated with lifestyles (29). Also the report of drug use only includes prescription medications that have been used in the past 30 days. Moreover, the recordings of BP represent one-day measurements as opposed to average measurement from several visits as recommended by 2017 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Guidelines.

Conclusion

The findings from this study provide insight into the current status and trends of quality of diabetes care in the US. The study results highlight persistent sociodemographic disparities and areas for improvement in diabetes management. Implementations of various guidelines to advance quality of diabetes care are among the many efforts to improve treatment outcomes of diabetes. Despite these efforts and overall improvements, suboptimal outcomes in diabetes care were still observed among blacks and Hispanics, uninsured populations and other socioeconomically disadvantaged groups. Targeted prevention approaches and disease management paradigm are needed for high-risk populations to achieve improved quality and equity in diabetes care.
Supplemental Table 1.

Sociodemographic and Clinical Characteristics of Adults with Diabetes (≥20 Years Old) -NHANES, 1999-2016

Variables

Overall

SE

1999-2004

SE

2005-2010

SE

2011-2016

SE

Ptrend

% (95% CI)

% (95% CI)

% (95% CI)

% (95% CI)

n=7521

n=1960

n=2663

n=2898

Age (years)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 20-39

9.3 (8.5-10.1)

0.4

9.9 (7.6-12.1)

1.1

9.3 (8.1-10.4)

0.6

7.8 (6.8-10.1)

0.6

0.03

 40-59

39.4 (37.8-41.0)

0.8

40.7 (38.0-43.4)

1.4

39.4 (36.7-42.1)

1.4

39.7 (35.8-41.3)

1.4

0.06

 ≥60

51.2 (49.5-52.9)

0.9

49.3 (45.9-52.7)

1.7

51.2 (48.3-54.1)

1.5

52.4 (49.7-55.0)

1.3

<0.01

Female

48.8 (47.2-50.3)

0.8

49.0 (46.7-51.2)

1.1

49.5 (46.7-52.3)

1.4

48.1 (45.5-50.7)

1.3

0.57

Educational Status

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 < High school

27.7 (26.1-29.2)

0.8

34.2 (27.4-36.9)

1.4

27.3 (22.1-30.4)

1.1

23.0 (20.9-25.4)

1.4

<0.001

 High school graduate

24.7 (23.1-26.3)

0.8

25.3 (22.4-28.1)

1.4

26.2 (23.0-29.3)

1.6

23.3 (20.9-25.4)

1.2

0.19

 Some college

29.2 (27.5-30.8)

0.8

25.8 (22.9-28.6)

1.5

28.8 (25.0-30.7)

1.4

32.4 (29.8-34.9)

1.3

<0.001

 College education or above

18.3 (16.7-19.9)

0.8

14.6 (12.3-17.0)

1.2

17.7 (15.1-20.0)

1.2

21.3 (18.1-24.2)

1.5

<0.001

Poverty-to-income ratio

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 <100%

17.2 (15.8-18.7)

0.8

17.3 (14.7-19.9)

1.3

14.6 (12.2-16.6)

1.1

19.6 (16.9-22.2)

1.4

0.08

 100-299%

42.9 (41.1-44.6)

0.9

44.9 (41.2-48.5)

1.8

44.5 (42.1-47.6)

1.4

39.9 (37.1-42.8)

1.4

0.04

 300-499%

22.2 (15.8-18.7)

0.8

22.0 (19.3-24.6)

1.3

21.2 (18.6-23.5)

1.2

23.3 (20.3-26.1)

1.5

0.33

 ≥500%

17.6 (15.9-19.3)

0.9

15.7 (12.6-18.8)

1.6

19.6 (17.3-21.9)

1.2

17.1 (14.0-20.3)

1.6

0.57

Race and ethnicity

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Whites

61.0 (57.9-64.1)

1.6

63.8 (58.4-68.9)

2.7

62.5 (57.0-67.8)

2.7

58.2 (53.0-63.4)

2.6

0.01

 Blacks

15.9 (14.0-17.5)

1.0

15.3 (12.0-18.5)

1.7

16.8 (13.8-17.6)

1.5

15.6 (12.2-18.8)

1.7

0.98

 Hispanics

15.1 (12.7-17.5)

1.2

13.9 (9.1-18.9)

2.5

14.0 (10.4-17.6)

1.8

16.6 (12.6-20.5)

2.0

<0.001

 Others

7.9 (6.7-9.0)

0.6

6.9 (4.6-9.1)

1.2

6.6 (4.9-8.3)

0.9

9.5 (7.6-11.5)

1.0

0.06

Insured

87.8 (86.8-88.8)

0.5

87.9 (86.1-89.8)

0.9

87.3 (85.3-89.2)

1.0

88.2 (86.8-89.6)

0.7

0.73

BMI, kg/m2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 <25

12.7 (11.5-13.9)

0.6

15.0 (12.0-18.1)

1.5

12.8 (11.2-14.4)

0.8

11.7 (9.5-13.0)

0.9

0.02

 25-<30

26.7 (25.3-28.1)

0.7

30.1 (27.0-33.2)

1.6

25.6 (23.2-28.1)

1.2

26.1 (23.5-27.8)

1.1

0.14

 ≥30

60.5 (58.6-62.4)

1.0

54.8 (50.6-58.8)

2.1

61.5 (58.5-64.4)

1.5

62.1 (59.9-66.0)

1.5

<0.01

Current smoker

17.1 (16.0-18.1)

0.5

19.7 (17.6-21.8)

1.1

17.0 (15.3-18.7)

0.9

15.5 (13.9-17.2)

0.9

<0.01

Statin user

57.6 (55.9-59.4)

0.9

28.4 (25.3-31.5)

1.0

46.3 (44.1-48.5)

1.1

50.1 (46.6-53.7)

1.8

<0.001

Diabetes medication

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Oral medications

55.0 (53.2-56.9)

0.8

55.8 (52.3-59.2)

1.2

56.8 (51.4-58.4)

1.5

57.9 (52.1-60.1)

1.3

0.001

 Insulin

13.2 (11.7-14.1)

0.5

15.8 (12.8-18.9)

1.3

12.9 (10.9-14.8)

0.8

11.5 (9.8-13.1)

0.8

0.01

 Oral medications and insulin

12.5 (11.4-13.6)

0.5

10.4 (7.6-13.0)

1.1

10.7 (11.9-15.4)

0.7

10.5 (11.1-14.1)

0.8

0.21

HbA1c<8%

75.3 (74.1-77.0)

0.8

72.1 (70.2-75.4)

1.3

73.6 (72.0-77.3)

1.3

79.6 (77.8-81.4)

1.3

<0.001

Blood pressure control

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 <140/90 mm Hg

71.5 (69.9-73.0)

0.8

67.4 (64.7-70.1)

1.4

71.8 (69.5-74.1)

1.2

73.6 (70.9-76.4)

1.4

0.01

 <130/80 mm Hg

48.6 (46.8-50.3)

0.8

42.3 (38.6-46.1)

1.8

50.2 (47.5-53.0)

1.3

51.1 (48.4-53.7)

1.4

0.03

Lipid profile

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 LDL-C ≤100 mg/dL

46.6 (44.0-49.2)

1.3

35.0 (30.1-40.0)

2.5

50.6 (46.7-54.6)

2.0

51.4 (47.0-55.8)

2.2

<0.001

 Triglycerides ≤ 150mg/dL

53.2 (50.3-56.2)

1.5

44.3 (39.9-48.6)

2.2

54.5 (50.5-58.5)

2.0

58.4 (51.4-65.5)

2.5

<0.001

Health services use in the past year

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Foot exam

71.5 (69.4-73.7)

1.1

*

*

71.4 (68.7-74.0)

1.3

71.8 (68.5-75.0)

1.6

0.35

 Eye exam

63.8 (61.1-65.8)

1.2

*

*

63.7 (60.5-66.9)

1.6

63.0 (59.6-66.5)

1.7

0.76

 Visited diabetes educator

36.9 (34.9-39.0)

1.0

*

*

38.5 (35.3-41.7)

1.6

34.8 (32.4-37.1)

1.2

0.06

Comorbidities

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Hypertension

64.8 (63.1-66.5)

0.8

61.3 (58.3-64.4)

1.5

65.8 (62.9-68.6)

1.5

65.9 (63.2-68.7)

1.4

<0.001

 Chronic kidney disease

22.4 (21.3-23.5)

0.6

21.6 (19.5-23.7)

1.1

22.3 (20.3-24.3)

1.0

22.9 (21.2-24.6)

0.9

0.01

 Cardiovascular diseases

23.3 (21.9-24.7)

0.7

23.7 (20.4-27.1)

1.7

23.9 (21.7-26.1)

1.1

22.6 (20.7-24.4)

0.9

0.47

 Albuminuria

27.3 (25.9-28.7)

0.7

30.9 (28.8-33.1)

1.1

27.0 (25.0-29.1)

1.0

25.4 (22.7-28.0)

1.3

<0.01

HbA1c = glycated haemoglobin; LDL-C = Low Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol; CI = confidence interval; SE = standard error.

Data not available at the time of the study.

Table 1.

Prevalence of Controlled Hemoglobin A1C (HbA1c< 8%) among Adults with Diabetes-NHANES, 1999-2016

Variables

Overall (n=7521)

1999-2004 (n=1960)

2005-2010 (n=2663)

2011-2016 (n=2898)

Ptrend (adjusted)

All patients

75.4 (0.8)

71.9 (1.4)

74.0 (1.2)

79.9 (1.4)

<0.001

Race and ethnicity

     

Whites

79.5 (1.0)

76.3 (2.0)

82.0 (3.0)

85.7 (3.0)

<0.01

Blacks

71.3 (1.1)

65.3 (3.0)

70.7 (1.6)

75.5 (1.6)

0.03

Hispanics

64.1 (1.6)

59.3 (3.4)

68.6 (3.0)

67.5 (2.4)

0.39

Others

73.8 (2.8)

70.5 (1.8)

78.5 (1.3)

79.7 (1.8)

0.45

Education

     

Less than high school

72.6 (1.2)

66.8 (2.1)

70.6 (1.8)

71.2 (2.1)

<0.001

High school graduate

73.3 (1.4)

70.0 (2.2)

72.0 (2.2)

76.2 (2.5)

0.09

Some college

77.6 (1.3)

72.5 (2.8)

79.0 (1.9)

78.0 (2.0)

0.12

College graduate or above

84.7 (1.7)

83.9 (3.5)

84.1 (2.7)

86.0 (2.6)

0.21

Poverty-to-income ratio (PIR)

     

<100%

70.1 (1.4)

67.8 (3.3)

69.9 (2.4)

71.5 (2.0)

0.02

100%-299%

74.0 (1.1)

72.0 (2.2)

70.1 (1.4)

78.2 (2.0)

0.12

300%-499%

76.3 (1.8)

71.8 (3.8)

81.9 (2.3)

79.8 (2.0)

0.56

≥500%

79.5 (1.9)

73.9 (3.2)

83.8 (2.8)

83.6 (3.5)

0.77

Insurance

     

Insured

78.3 (2.2)

75.4 (1.5)

76.7 (1.2)

82.5 (1.3)

<0.001

Uninsured

61.9 (0.8)

57.2 (3.1)

67.9 (2.9)

59.6 (3.6)

0.11

Diabetes medication

     

Oral medications only

80.0 (0.9)

72.6 (1.9)

80.9 (1.3)

84.0 (1.4)

<0.001

Insulin only

58.0 (2.2)

54.9 (3.4)

56.2 (4.2)

61.1 (3.5)

0.32

Oral medications and insulin

51.6 (2.4)

49.6 (4.8)

46.3 (3.8)

59.8 (3.4)

0.21

None

85.6 (1.1)

84.6 (1.9)

89.3 (1.6)

82.7 (2.0)

0.32

Statin use

     

Yes

79.2 (1.2)

74.1 (2.7)

80.2 (1.4)

86.7 (2.4)

0.01

No

70.2 (1.1)

69.3 (1.6)

71.5 (1.8)

70.3 (2.3)

0.44

Co-morbidities

     

Hypertension

75.1 (1.6)

74.5 (1.5)

76.2 (1.1)

76.7 (1.5)

0.16

Chronic kidney disease

72.4 (1.0)

69.2 (2.7)

76.2 (1.9)

69.6 (2.4)

0.52

Cardiovascular disease

70.5 (1.5)

70.7 (1.3)

68.0 (1.4)

71.8 (1.5)

0.70

Albuminuria

65.3 (1.4)

63.4 (2.5)

63.9 (2.0)

62.7 (2.4)

0.33

Data are presented as percentages and Standard Error (SE)

Table 2.

Prevalence of Controlled Blood Pressure (< 130/80 mm Hg) among Adults with Diabetes-NHANES, 1999-2016

Variables

Overall (n=7521)

1999-2004 (n=1960)

2005-2010 (n=2663)

2011-2016 (n=2898)

Ptrend (adjusted)

All patients

51.3 (0.8)

42.3 (1.8)

48.8 (1.3)

51.2 (1.4)

<0.001

Race and ethnicity

     

Whites

51.4 (1.3)

44.5 (2.7)

51.8 (1.9)

53.8 (2.1)

0.01

Blacks

44.4 (1.5)

43.8 (1.5)

49.6 (1.9)

53.3 (2.2)

0.03

Hispanics

40.5 (1.2)

36.8 (2.6)

42.8 (1.7)

40.7 (2.1)

0.26

Others

53.3 (1.6)

41.2 (2.9)

52.6 (2.0)

59.8 (2.3)

<0.001

Education

     

Less than high school

44.2 (1.3)

37.1 (2.2)

44.4 (2.0)

47.8 (2.3)

<0.001

High school graduate

46.1 (1.5)

42.4 (3.0)

46.4 (2.2)

48.6 (2.7)

0.18

Some college

50.2 (1.6)

44.5 (3.3)

53.4 (2.5)

50.8 (2.4)

0.42

College graduate or above

55.4 (2.2)

50.6 (4.7)

60.4 (4.0)

54.2 (3.1)

0.28

Poverty-to-income ratio (PIR)

     

<100%

44.5 (1.6)

38.5 (2.8)

46.0 (3.2)

47.1 (2.4)

0.02

100%-299%

46.5 (1.2)

40.0 (2.4)

48.9 (1.6)

50.1 (2.0)

<0.001

300%-499%

54.0 (2.0)

49.4 (5.1)

54.9 (3.9)

55.7 (3.8)

0.45

≥500%

50.0 (2.6)

44.5 (1.9)

54.1 (1.9)

50.6 (2.0)

0.75

Insurance

     

Insured

54.3 (1.9)

47.0 (2.0)

54.0 (1.5)

57.4 (1.4)

<0.001

Uninsured

45.6 (0.9)

46.8 (4.6)

45.5 (2.8)

44.6 (3.0)

0.35

Statin use

     

Yes

57.9 (1.4)

42.9 (3.6)

56.2 (2.0)

61.9 (2.3)

0.03

No

45.8 (1.2)

42.1 (2.1)

42.1 (1.7)

47.3 (2.4)

0.07

Diabetes Medication

     

Oral medications only

51.0 (1.2)

45.6 (2.1)

54.0 (2.1)

50.4 (2.0)

0.22

Insulin

57.4 (2.5)

52.2 (4.5)

59.0 (3.8)

59.0 (4.4)

0.47

Oral medication and insulin

54.4 (2.3)

47.8 (5.3)

51.6 (3.1)

58.8 (3.3)

<0.01

None

47.8 (2.0)

47.2 (1.4)

44.3 (3.7)

49.5 (2.9)

0.18

Co-morbidities

 

 

 

 

 

Hypertension

31.5 (0.9)

22.8 (1.8)

34.2 (1.2)

34.4 (1.6)

<0.01

Chronic Kidney Disease

37.9 (1.4)

30.9 (3.5)

41.7 (2.1)

38.7 (2.0)

0.29

Cardiovascular disease

49.4 (1.1)

38.2 (2.9)

45.9 (2.1)

50.4 (2.7)

0.05

Albuminuria

31.3 (1.4)

28.3 (2.8)

37.2 (2.1)

28.3 (2.2)

0.08

Data are presented as percentages and Standard Error (SE)

Table 3.

Prevalence of Controlled LDL-C (<100 mg/dL) among Adults with Diabetes -NHANES, 1999-2014

Variables

Overall (n=2750)

1999-2002 (n=454)

2003-2006 (n=543)

2007-2010 (n=910)

2011-2014 (n=843)

Ptrend (adjusted)

All patients

46.6 (1.3)

31.9 (3.4)

44.2 (2.7)

50.5 (2.4)

52.5 (2.2)

<0.001

Race and ethnicity

      

Whites

49.7 (1.4)

34.6(5.0)

45.4 (3.6)

55.5 (3.3)

56.9 (3.3)

<0.001

Blacks

40.5 (5.0)

27.9(0.8)

39.7 (1.7)

40.6 (1.4)

45.5 (1.6)

0.02

Hispanics

36.6 (4.0)

24.7(2.2)

37.6 (2.1)

41.4 (3.6)

33.9 (4.6)

0.48

Others

47.5 (2.4)

33.8(3.2)

40.5 (3.9)

51.3 (2.8)

52.6 (3.7)

0.12

Education

      

Less than high school

45.2 (0.8)

29.5 (1.2)

42.8 (1.6)

48.6 (1.6)

49.4 (1.4)

<0.01

High school graduate

46.5 (1.0)

34.8 (3.0)

41.7 (1.7)

57.8 (2.5)

46.1 (1.9)

0.24

Some college

47.6 (1.1)

24.9 (1.5)

46.7 (1.7)

47.9 (1.7)

57.3 (2.1)

0.03

College graduate or above

55.6 (0.8)

48.0 (1.7)

47.8 (1.8)

50.9 (3.0)

52.4 (2.3)

0.19

Poverty-to-income ratio (PIR)

      

<100%

37.4 (0.6)

20.4 (1.3)

32.7 (1.2)

41.6 (1.4)

45.6 (2.2)

<0.01

100%-299%

46.3 (1.3)

31.3 (1.2)

39.3 (1.3)

48.6 (1.7)

50.7 (1.7)

0.03

300%-499%

50.7 (1.0)

40.2 (2.6)

47.5 (1.9)

55.9 (2.0)

59.6 (3.0)

0.01

≥500%

48.9 (1.0)

47.5 (2.5)

44.9 (2.4)

49.6 (3.2)

53.7 (2.7)

0.29

Insurance

      

Insured

48.3 (0.5)

41.7 (0.8)

47.3 (0.9)

53.5 (1.2)

54.0 (1.2)

0.02

Uninsured

35.1 (1.3)

29.1 (1.1)

32.3 (1.7)

35.7 (1.9)

33.6 (1.9)

0.95

Statin use

      

Yes

68.6 (1.0)

45.7 (2.9)

65.9 (1.5)

71.3 (2.0)

72.1 (2.2)

<0.01

No

30.9 (1.2)

28.0 (0.9)

33.0 (0.8)

30.2 (0.9)

32.4 (1.7)

0.34

Diabetes Medication

      

Oral medications only

52.5 (1.5)

34.8 (0.8)

50.0 (1.2)

53.8 (1.6)

59.6 (1.5)

<0.001

Insulin

55.3 (0.7)

24.3 (2.6)

64.9 (2.5)

59.0 (3.9)

51.1 (4.1)

0.10

Oral medication and insulin

51.7 (0.7)

37.2 (1.3)

53.6 (2.8)

60.8 (3.3)

60.4 (4.6)

0.24

None

39.2 (0.9)

27.9 (2.6)

38.1 (1.2)

42.1 (2.1)

40.1 (1.9)

0.48

Co-morbidities

      

Hypertension

51.7 (0.8)

33.4 (0.9)

50.7 (0.9)

56.1 (1.4)

56.4 (1.5)

0.47

Chronic Kidney Disease

53.6 (1.3)

38.0 (1.2)

51.9 (1.9)

60.6 (2.3)

61.9 (2.1)

0.16

Cardiovascular disease

58.4 (0.8)

41.2 (1.1)

49.1 (2.4)

65.2 (1.6)

63.7 (2.7)

0.24

Albuminuria

48.8 (1.3)

33.7 (0.8)

48.5 (0.9)

48.9 (1.3)

59.1 (1.1)

0.14

Data are presented as percentages and Standard Error (SE)

Table 4.

Prevalence of Controlled Triglycerides (<150 mg/dL) among Adults with Diabetes-NHANES 1999-2014

Variables

Overall (n=2750)

1999-2002 (n=454)

2003-2006 (n=543)

2007-2010 (n=910)

2011-2014 (n=843)

Ptrend (adjusted)

All patients

53.0 (1.5)

45.4 (2.9)

47.6 (2.9)

55.8 (2.1)

58.8 (3.5)

<0.001

Race and ethnicity

      

Whites

50.8 (1.6)

43.0 (1.1)

47.5 (1.4)

54.6 (1.5)

56.9 (2.3)

0.02

Blacks

72.4 (0.8)

62.4 (1.5)

68.6 (1.9)

72.9 (2.2)

79.9 (2.5)

<0.01

Hispanics

47.8 (0.8)

49.6 (3.0)

42.7 (2.2)

45.9 (1.9)

51.5 (1.9)

0.53

Others

47.5 (0.5)

41.9 (3.2)

45.5 (1.1)

56.0 (4.0)

54.8 (3.4)

0.15

Education

      

Less than high school

50.2 (0.8)

44.4 (3.6)

47.2 (3.4)

48.1 (3.7)

58.7 (4.1)

0.03

High school graduate

51.8 (0.9)

45.5 (5.7)

47.0 (4.5)

57.5 (3.0)

57.8 (4.4)

0.02

Some college

53.0 (1.0)

38.9 (1.1)

49.2 (1.8)

55.7 (1.6)

59.0 (2.8)

<0.01

College graduate or above

59.0 (0.9)

58.6 (1.9)

50.8 (2.2)

65.4 (3.0)

59.6 (3.1)

0.64

Poverty-to-income ratio (PIR)

      

<100%

47.8 (0.7)

32.0 (1.3)

40.1 (1.6)

49.0 (1.2)

51.0 (2.5)

0.01

100%-299%

54.5 (1.3)

50.9 (1.5)

49.5 (1.8)

54.7 (1.4)

60.9 (2.0)

0.14

300%-499%

51.0 (1.0)

41.2 (1.6)

45.0 (2.1)

58.5 (2.0)

51.3 (2.7)

0.12

≥500%

57.0 (1.1)

52.8 (1.9)

60.4 (2.2)

66.9 (3.6)

68.4 (4.3)

0.02

Insurance

      

Insured

58.2 (0.5)

47.0 (0.9)

49.3 (1.1)

56.9 (1.1)

60.8 (1.6)

0.02

Uninsured

45.0 (1.6)

42.5 (2.2)

36.7 (1.7)

50.5 (1.8)

49.2 (1.8)

0.54

Statin use

      

Yes

56.1 (1.1)

49.5 (3.0)

54.5 (1.2)

57.1 (1.3)

64.2 (1.2)

0.02

No

51.2 (1.0)

43.8 (1.1)

46.8 (1.0)

52.6 (1.1)

51.4 (1.3)

0.13

Diabetes Medication

      

Oral medications only

52.3 (1.5)

40.9 (0.9)

46.5 (1.3)

53.5 (1.3)

61.6 (2.1)

0.03

Insulin

67.1 (0.7)

69.5 (1.8)

56.2 (2.7)

61.3 (3.9)

68.0 (4.2)

0.55

Oral medication and insulin

51.5 (0.6)

37.8 (1.2)

43.5 (2.9)

52.3 (3.4)

51.9 (3.4)

0.50

None

54.9 (1.0)

50.9 (2.5)

49.4 (2.1)

59.8 (2.4)

55.9 (2.4)

0.44

Co-morbidities

      

Hypertension

53.4 (1.3)

45.4 (1.0)

48.2 (1.1)

54.9 (1.1)

59.5 (1.6)

0.03

Chronic Kidney Disease

56.3 (1.4)

46.4 (1.6)

56.3 (1.9)

61.3 (1.5)

64.7 (2.2)

<0.001

Cardiovascular disease

52.2 (0.9)

40.1 (1.5)

49.1 (1.7)

55.8 (1.5)

55.9 (1.9)

0.02

Albuminuria

46.9 (1.4)

36.9 (1.0)

43.7 (1.1)

52.6 (1.2)

50.4 (1.5)

0.10

Data are presented as percentages and Standard Error (SE)

Table 5.

Adjusted Odds Ratios for Achieving Quality Indicators for Diabetes Care among Adults with Diabetes, NHANES 1999-2016

Variables

HbA1c <8%

BP <130/80 mm/Hg

LDL-C <100 mg/dL

Triglycerides <150 mg/dL)

Receipt of eye examination

Receipt of foot examination

Visited a diabetes educator

Age (ref: 20 to 39)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 40 to 59

1.08 (0.76-1.54)

0.97 (0.71-1.32)

0.70 (0.42-1.19)

0.61 (0.39-1.26)

1.62 (0.99-1.98)

1.33 (0.91-1.94)

1.05 (0.90-1.26)

 ≥60

1.75 (1.16-2.63)*

0.64 (0.46-0.89)*

1.27 (1.01-1.58)*

0.76 (0.56-0.99)*

2.51 (1.48-4.26)*

1.63 (1.03-2.58)*

1.28 (1.43-1.31)*

Gender

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Women vs. men

0.57 (0.50-0.66)*

1.09 (0.92-1.29)

0.66 (0.51-0.84)*

0.91 (0.71-1.16)

1.22 (0.97-1.54)

1.14 (0.86-1.51)

1.12 (0.91-1.30)

Educational status (ref: < high school)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 High school graduate

1.01 (0.77-1.23)

1.01 (0.81-1.25)

1.01 (0.67-1.11)

1.11 (0.85-1.45)

1.01 (0.81-1.25)

1.26 (0.95-1.67)

1.08 (0.83-1.39)

 Some college

1.03 (0.78-1.26)

1.15 (0.93-1.43)

1.40 (0.62-1.42)

1.23 (0.93-1.61)

1.15 (0.93-1.43)

1.29 (0.93-1.77)

1.18 (0.90-1.53)

 College graduate or above

1.42 (1.03-1.96)*

1.25 (0.94-1.68)

1.43 (1.14-2.39)*

1.58 (1.05-2.39)*

1.25 (1.10-1.68)

1.85 (1.15-2.97)*

1.38 (1.10-1.65)*

Poverty income-ratio (ref: <100%)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 100%-299%

1.07 (0.84-1.37)

0.94 (0.77-1.14)

1.29 (0.90-1.86)

1.31 (0.96-1.78)

1.28 (0.98-1.59)

0.94 (0.71-1.25)

1.05 (0.81-1.35)

 300%-499%

1.30 (0.62-1.24)

1.03 (0.77-1.31)

1.30 (1.00-2.10)*

1.00 (0.68-1.45)

1.33 (1.11-2.11)*

0.97 (0.67-1.41)

1.09 (0.85-1.40)

 ≥500%

1.60 (0.64-1.34)

1.13 (0.58-1.08)

1.41 (0.80-2.50)

1.32 (0.86-2.12)

1.40 (0.84-1.97)

1.40 (0.90-2.18)

1.33 (1.06-1.54)

Race and ethnicity (ref: whites)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Blacks

0.77 (0.63-0.96)*

0.75 (0.63-0.89)*

0.68 (0.51-0.90)*

3.61 (2.63-4.95)*

1.37 (1.06-1.78)*

1.42 (1.07-1.88)

1.40 (1.12-1.75)*

 Hispanics

0.62 (0.49-0.79)*

0.52 (0.35-0.72)*

0.64 (0.44-0.92)*

1.21 (0.88-1.68)

1.05 (0.80-1.38)

0.83 (0.62-0.95)*

1.15 (0.91-1.50)

 Others

0.88 (0.58-1.33)

1.02 (0.77-1.49)

1.23 (0.79-1.94)

0.78 (0.48-1.28)

1.19 (0.82-1.72)

0.97 (0.62-1.51)

0.92 (0.58-1.45)

Insurance

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Uninsured vs. insured

0.56 (0.44-0.72)*

0.81 (0.62-0.99)*

0.78 (0.58-0.82)*

0.74 (0.53-0.85)*

0.81 (0.62-0.92)*

0.53 (0.38-0.74)*

1.04 (0.73-1.55)

BMI, kg/m2 (ref:<25)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 25-<30

1.06 (0.76-1.46)

1.22 (0.95-1.57)

0.83 (0.56-1.31)

0.56 (0.39-0.80)*

0.78 (0.56-1.09)

0.75 (0.51-1.11)

0.94 (0.75-1.25)

 ≥30

0.84 (0.61-1.17)

1.29 (0.96-1.53)

0.89 (0.59-1.35)

0.50 (0.36-0.71)*

0.90 (0.65-1.24)

0.82 (0.54-1.25)

1.12 (1.01-1.34)*

Current smoker

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Yes vs. no

0.88 (0.68-1.14)

0.82 (0.73-1.11)

1.07 (0.78-1.47)

0.85 (0.62-1.17)

0.62 (0.48-0.79)*

1.29 (0.90-1.86)

0.76 (0.54-1.07)

Statin use

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Yes vs. no

1.19 (0.97-1.47)

1.28 (1.07-1.54)*

3.84 (2.89-5.09)*

1.15 (0.89-1.48)

1.54 (1.20-1.97)*

1.36 (1.03-1.80)*

0.86 (0.67-0.95)*

Diabetes education (ref: none)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Oral medications only

2.40 (1.96-2.47)*

1.52 (1.27-1.82)*

1.64 (1.26-2.17)*

0.97 (0.76-1.24)

0.86 (0.56-1.03)

1.32 (0.98-1.45)

2.70 (1.89-3.84)

 Insulin only

1.60 (1.40-1.80)*

0.95 (0.77-1.09)

0.97 (0.80-1.03)

0.92 (0.84-1.09)

1.79 (1.38-2.59)*

2.72 (1.86-4.02)*

1.37 (0.95-1.66)

 Oral medications and insulin

1.32 (0.93-1.37)

1.03 (0.89-1.33)

1.13 (0.96-1.26)

1.02 (0.91-1.18)

1.00 (0.92-1.24)

1.20 (0.84-1.03)

1.40 (1.27-1.68)

Comorbidities (ref: without comorbidity)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Hypertension

0.57 (0.33-0.76)*

0.23 (0.19-0.28)*

0.89 (0.66-1.35)

0.93 (0.72-1.19)

0.97 (0.78-1.31)

1.15 (0.91-1.46)

0.98 (0.76-1.26)

 Chronic kidney disease

0.89 (0.70-1.15)

0.95 (0.77-1.16)

1.01 (0.71-1.39)

1.19 (0.88-1.60)

1.04 (0.82-1.29)

1.41 (1.01-1.97)

1.30 (0.99-1.73)

 Cardiovascular disease

1.02 (0.79-1.31)

1.18 (0.96-1.45)

1.00 (0.72-1.40)

0.87 (0.66-1.15)

1.47 (1.12-1.94)*

0.99 (0.68-1.23)

1.20 (0.90-1.49)

 Albuminuria

0.48 (0.39-0.60)*

0.49 (0.41-0.59)*

1.11 (0.82-1.49)

0.62 (0.46-0.82)*

1.00 (0.73-1.35)

0.92 (0.69-1.23)

1.19 (0.95-1.49)

Estimates are statistically significant at P < 0.05.

  25 in total

Review 1.  2. Classification and Diagnosis of Diabetes.

Authors: 
Journal:  Diabetes Care       Date:  2016-01       Impact factor: 19.112

Review 2.  Screening, prevention, counseling, and treatment for the complications of type II diabetes mellitus. Putting evidence into practice.

Authors:  S Vijan; D L Stevens; W H Herman; M M Funnell; C J Standiford
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  1997-09       Impact factor: 5.128

3.  Retinopathy in older patients with diabetes mellitus.

Authors:  Satoshi Kato; Miho Takemori; Shigehiko Kitano; Sadao Hori; Harumi Fukushima; Jiro Numaga; Hidetoshi Yamashita
Journal:  Diabetes Res Clin Pract       Date:  2002-12       Impact factor: 5.602

4.  Trends in elevated triglyceride in adults: United States, 2001-2012.

Authors:  Margaret Carroll; Brian Kit; David Lacher
Journal:  NCHS Data Brief       Date:  2015-05

Review 5.  Diabetes in elderly adults.

Authors:  G S Meneilly; D Tessier
Journal:  J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci       Date:  2001-01       Impact factor: 6.053

6.  Improvements in diabetes processes of care and intermediate outcomes: United States, 1988-2002.

Authors:  Jinan B Saaddine; Betsy Cadwell; Edward W Gregg; Michael M Engelgau; Frank Vinicor; Giuseppina Imperatore; K M Venkat Narayan
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  2006-04-04       Impact factor: 25.391

7.  Seventh report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure.

Authors:  Aram V Chobanian; George L Bakris; Henry R Black; William C Cushman; Lee A Green; Joseph L Izzo; Daniel W Jones; Barry J Materson; Suzanne Oparil; Jackson T Wright; Edward J Roccella
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2003-12-01       Impact factor: 10.190

8.  Insurance coverage and diabetes quality indicators among patients in NHANES.

Authors:  Emily D Doucette; Joanne Salas; Jeffrey F Scherrer
Journal:  Am J Manag Care       Date:  2016-07       Impact factor: 2.229

9.  Trends and disparities in statin use and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels among US patients with diabetes, 1999-2014.

Authors:  Anna Gu; Shweta Kamat; Edgar Argulian
Journal:  Diabetes Res Clin Pract       Date:  2018-02-21       Impact factor: 5.602

10.  Do healthier lifestyles lead to less utilization of healthcare resources?

Authors:  I-Chen Lee; Chao-Sung Chang; Pey-Lan Du
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2017-03-31       Impact factor: 2.655

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  2 in total

1.  Cross-Sector Collaborations Between Health Care Systems and Community Partners That Target Health Equity/Disparities in Diabetes Care.

Authors:  Leonard E Egede; Mukoso N Ozieh; Jennifer A Campbell; Joni S Williams; Rebekah J Walker
Journal:  Diabetes Spectr       Date:  2022-08-15

2.  The Chinese Metabolic Management Centers.

Authors:  Jianmin Liu; Zachary Bloomgarden
Journal:  J Diabetes       Date:  2022-06-17       Impact factor: 4.530

  2 in total

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