
(HealthDay News) — Adults with diabetes living in small towns are disproportionately impacted by complications of diabetes, according to a study published online in Diabetes Care.
Kyle Steiger, MD, from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and colleagues used the OptumLabs Data Warehouse to identify 2.9 million US commercially insured adults and Medicare Advantage beneficiaries with diabetes (January 2012 through December 2021) to compare the risk for diabetes complications in remote areas (population <2,500), small towns (population 2500 to 50,000), and cities (population >50,000).
The researchers found that compared with residents of cities, residents of remote areas had greater hazards of myocardial infarction (hazard ratio [HR], 1.06) and revascularization (HR, 1.04). But residents of remote areas had a lower risk for hyperglycemia (HR, 0.90) and stroke (HR, 0.91). Residents of small towns had greater hazards of hyperglycemia (HR, 1.06), hypoglycemia (HR, 1.15), end-stage kidney disease (HR, 1.04), myocardial infarction (HR, 1.10), heart failure (HR, 1.05), amputation (HR, 1.05), other lower-extremity complications (HR, 1.02), and revascularization (HR, 1.05) compared with residents of cities, but they had a lower risk for stroke (HR, 0.95). Residents of remote areas versus those living in small towns had lower hazards of hyperglycemia (HR, 0.85), hypoglycemia (HR, 0.92), and heart failure (HR, 0.94). There was no geographic variation in the risk for retinopathy and atrial fibrillation/flutter.
“While our study didn’t address why these differences exist, we do know that people living outside of city areas are less likely to receive care from diabetes specialists, to receive diabetes self-management education, and to be monitored for diabetes complications,” coauthor Esa Davis, MD, from the University of Maryland in Baltimore, said in a statement. “Our research builds on this foundational evidence to demonstrate a possible impact that these differences have on preventable diabetes complications.”
References:
Steiger K, Herrin J, Swarna KS, Davis EM, McCoy RG. Disparities in Acute and Chronic Complications of Diabetes Along the U.S. Rural-Urban Continuum. Diabetes Care. 2024 Feb 22:dc231552. doi:10.2337/dc23-1552
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