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Prevalence of diagnosed diabetes and associated risk factors: evidence from the large-scale surveys in India

Prevalence of diagnosed diabetes and associated risk factors: evidence from the large-scale surveys in India
Prevalence of diagnosed diabetes and associated risk factors: evidence from the large-scale surveys in India
Context: India has observed the most devastating increases in the burden of diabetes in the contemporary era. However, so far, the comparable prevalence of diabetes is only available for limited geography.

Aims: the present paper provides comparable estimates of diabetes prevalence in states and districts of India and examines the associated risk factors with newly diagnosed and self-reported diabetes.

Setting and design: the study uses clinical, anthropometric, and biochemical data from District Level Household and Facility Survey (2012–2013) and Annual Health Survey (2014).

Subjects and methods: the paper analyses the information on glucose level of the blood sample and defines diabetes as per the World Health Organization (1999) criteria. It applies multinomial logistic regression to identify the risk factors of diabetes.

Results: the study estimates 7% adults with diabetes in India, with a higher level in urban (9.8%) than in the rural area (5.7%), a higher proportion of males (7.1%) than females (6.8%). Widowed, older persons, and persons with high blood pressure have very high risk of both diagnosed and self-reported diabetes. Comparing to Hindus, Muslims and Christians have higher, and Sikhs have less risk of diabetes. Further, corresponding to general caste, scheduled castes, and other backward classes have a high risk of newly diagnosed but the lower risk of self-reported diabetes.

Conclusions: the list of districts and states with alarming diabetes prevalence is the valuable information for further programs and research. A significant population with undiagnosed diabetes reflects an urgent need to strengthen the diagnostics at the local level and for those who need them most.
2321-0656
28-36
Akhtar, Saddaf Naaz
aa7e6bda-4317-4905-bbde-1582a6a7bf58
Dhillon, Preeti
267d7e2b-d563-4afb-9220-4cf1737be438
Akhtar, Saddaf Naaz
aa7e6bda-4317-4905-bbde-1582a6a7bf58
Dhillon, Preeti
267d7e2b-d563-4afb-9220-4cf1737be438

Akhtar, Saddaf Naaz and Dhillon, Preeti (2018) Prevalence of diagnosed diabetes and associated risk factors: evidence from the large-scale surveys in India. Journal of Social Health and Diabetes, 05 (01), 28-36. (doi:10.4103/2321-0656.194001).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Context: India has observed the most devastating increases in the burden of diabetes in the contemporary era. However, so far, the comparable prevalence of diabetes is only available for limited geography.

Aims: the present paper provides comparable estimates of diabetes prevalence in states and districts of India and examines the associated risk factors with newly diagnosed and self-reported diabetes.

Setting and design: the study uses clinical, anthropometric, and biochemical data from District Level Household and Facility Survey (2012–2013) and Annual Health Survey (2014).

Subjects and methods: the paper analyses the information on glucose level of the blood sample and defines diabetes as per the World Health Organization (1999) criteria. It applies multinomial logistic regression to identify the risk factors of diabetes.

Results: the study estimates 7% adults with diabetes in India, with a higher level in urban (9.8%) than in the rural area (5.7%), a higher proportion of males (7.1%) than females (6.8%). Widowed, older persons, and persons with high blood pressure have very high risk of both diagnosed and self-reported diabetes. Comparing to Hindus, Muslims and Christians have higher, and Sikhs have less risk of diabetes. Further, corresponding to general caste, scheduled castes, and other backward classes have a high risk of newly diagnosed but the lower risk of self-reported diabetes.

Conclusions: the list of districts and states with alarming diabetes prevalence is the valuable information for further programs and research. A significant population with undiagnosed diabetes reflects an urgent need to strengthen the diagnostics at the local level and for those who need them most.

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2321-0656.194001 - Version of Record
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e-pub ahead of print date: 23 November 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 491805
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491805
ISSN: 2321-0656
PURE UUID: 0f51af2a-f14e-4aa9-8e9c-bd4d74cbc226
ORCID for Saddaf Naaz Akhtar: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0346-5220

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Date deposited: 04 Jul 2024 16:47
Last modified: 12 Jul 2024 02:14

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Contributors

Author: Saddaf Naaz Akhtar ORCID iD
Author: Preeti Dhillon

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