World
Health Stat Q 1992;45(4):347-9
Recent developments in the epidemiology of diabetes in the Americas.
Mitchell BD, Stern MP.
Department of Medicine, University of Texas Health Science Center, San
Antonio.
The prevalence of diabetes recorded in population surveys in the American
region varies from < 1% (rural Mapuche Indians aged 20 years and over,
Chile) to almost 50% (Pima Indians aged 20 years and over, United States
of America). The prevalence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM) was approximately 2.5 times higher among Mexican Americans than
in non-Hispanic white Americans. In the Mexican Americans, prevalence
followed a sociocultural gradient: 16% in low-income barrios, about 10%
in middle-income neighbourhoods and 5% in high-income suburbs in San Antonio,
Texas. Data from the Hispanic Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
indicate prevalence of diabetes in the age range 45-74 years of 24% for
Mexican Americans, 26% for Puerto Ricans and 16% for Cuban Americans,
compared to 12% for non-Hispanic whites. Figures for a low-income district
of Mexico City show a 36% lower prevalence than for Mexican Americans
in the USA. Prevalence in Brazil is approximately 7% in subjects aged
30-69 years. Black Americans have a relatively high prevalence of NIDDM,
though not as high as the Mexican Americans. There is evidence that complications
of diabetes may vary between populations, and that they may be particularly
severe in Mexican Americans, and higher in black than in white Americans.
The extent to which these differences relate to access to health care
and treatment remains to be clarified.
PMID: 1299075 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]