U.S. Women Lagging in Diabetes Care, Study Suggests
06.18.07, 12:00 AM ETMONDAY, June 18 (HealthDay News) -- In a finding that partly challenges
the conventional wisdom that women live longer than men, a new study
suggests that the medical advances of the last few decades against
diabetes haven't benefited women.
Researchers found that the death rates of diabetic men dropped in recent
decades, while those of diabetic women increased. It's not clear why the
discrepancy exists.
\"I do not have a clue,\" said Dr. Larry Deeb, president of medicine and
science for the American Diabetes Association (ADA), when asked why women
are falling behind. \"But I do know that it argues that something we're
doing isn't right. If you're a woman, and you have diabetes, it may be
we're not aggressive enough about taking care of you.\"
In the new study, researchers led by Edward Gregg, an epidemiologist with
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, examined health
surveys spanning 1971 to 2000 to determine the death rates of Americans
with diabetes. The researchers looked at about 27,000 people.
They found that among diabetic men, the death rate from all causes dipped
from 42.6 to 24.4 deaths per 1,000 persons between the two time periods.
Among men, \"their mortality rates have declined,\" Gregg said, \"and they've
kept pace with their non-diabetic counterparts.\"
But among diabetic women, the death rate actually rose from 18.4 to 25.9
per 1,000, even as the life span of non-diabetic women grew longer.
Death rates from cardiovascular disease, in particular, stayed steady
among women with diabetes while dropping among diabetic men.
The researchers reported their findings in the June 18 online edition of
the Annals of Internal Medicine.
Why are women with diabetes at such high risk? \"We can speculate on a few
possibilities, that risk factors for things such as heart disease haven't
declined as much among women as in men,\" Gregg said. \"Another possibility
is that women haven't gotten as aggressive or comprehensive treatment as
men have over the years.\"
The ADA's Deeb, who's familiar with the study findings, said the research
appears to be sound. \"I don't think we can discount it,\" he said. \"I think
it's real.\"
An estimated 9.7 million American women have diabetes, and almost
one-third of them don't know it. Women with diabetes are more likely to
have a heart attack, and at a younger age, than women without diabetes,
according to the ADA.
Diabetes is at least two to four times more common among black, Hispanic,
American Indian, and Asian/Pacific Islander women than white women. The
risk for the disease increases with age. Given the increasing life span of
women and the rapid growth of minority populations, the number of women in
the United States at risk for diabetes is increasing, the ADA said.
Meanwhile, a new U.S. study released Monday said that women are now about
as likely as men to get recommended screening tests and treatments to
manage their diabetes.
According to the latest News and Numbers from the federal Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality, for Americans age 40 and over with
diabetes:
The percentage of women who report being given three key recommended
exams for diabetes -- blood sugar, retinal and foot -- increased from 37
percent in 2000 to 47 percent in 2003. During the same period, the
percentage of men who reported receiving these exams rose only 3 percent
from 46 percent to 49 percent.
The proportion of women whose blood sugar level was optimal increased
from 38 percent for the period 1988 to 1994 to 47 percent for 1999 to
2002. In contrast, the proportion of men with optimal blood sugar level
fell from 44 percent to 43 percent during the period.
In spite of the narrowing disparities between the genders, less than 60
percent of Americans, as a whole, receive optimal care for their
diabetes.
More information
To learn more about women and diabetes, visit the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration.(http://www.fda.gov/womens/taketimetocare/diabetes/fswomen.html)
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