Health
Diabetes treatment should be localised: Study
Washington, Feb 8
The factors behind the
prevalence of diabetes may be affected by the geography and hence the
prevention and treatment should be based on the local factors, said a
study.
"In one region of the US, poverty and lower education
outcomes are more predictive of higher diabetes prevalence, and in other
regions, physical inactivity and obesity are more predictive," said
lead author J. Aaron Hipp, assistant professor from Washington
University's Brown School in the US.
The study suggests that approaches to combating the disease should be localised.
Hipp
and co-author Nishesh Chalise analysed county data from the US Census
Bureau and the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention to find
attributes associated with diabetes.
They discovered that results
varied by region. Poverty levels and inactivity were associated with
diabetes, but only in some areas. The percentage of the population
cycling or walking to work correlated with lower prevalence of diabetes
in most counties, but not in some rural areas of Minnesota, North Dakota
and South Dakota.
"Given this clustering of predictors of
diabetes prevalence, and knowing the effect of the predictors we used in
our study, counties, states and regions should be able to better target
the most common predictors of diabetes in their more local area," Hipp
added.
The study was published in the journal Preventing Chronic Disease.