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Differences in U.S. Rural-Urban Trends in Diabetes ABCS, 1999–2018

Carla Mercado, Kai McKeever Bullard, Edward W. Gregg, Mohammed K. Ali, Sharon Saydah, Giuseppina Imperatore

2021Diabetes Care42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine changes in and the relationships between diabetes management and rural and urban residence. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: moking. We compared odds of urban versus rural residents (census tract population size ≥2,500 considered urban, otherwise rural) having poor ABCS across time (1999-2006, 2007-2012, and 2013-2018), overall and by sociodemographic and clinical characteristics. RESULTS: During 1999-2018, the proportion of U.S. adults with diabetes residing in rural areas ranged between 15% and 19.5%. In 1999-2006, there were no statistically significant rural-urban differences in poor ABCS. However, from 1999-2006 to 2013-2018, there were greater improvements for urban adults with diabetes than for rural for BP ≥140/90 mmHg (relative odds ratio [OR] 0.8, 95% CI 0.6-0.9) and non-HDL ≥160 mg/dL (≥4.1 mmol/L) (relative OR 0.45, 0.4-0.5). These differences remained statistically significant after adjustment for race/ethnicity, education, poverty levels, and clinical characteristics. Yet, over the 1999-2018 time period, minority race/ethnicity, lower education attainment, poverty, and lack of health insurance coverage were factors associated with poorer A, B, C, or S in urban adults compared with their rural counterparts. CONCLUSIONS: Over two decades, rural U.S. adults with diabetes have had less improvement in BP and cholesterol control. In addition, rural-urban differences exist across sociodemographic groups, suggesting that efforts to narrow this divide may need to address both socioeconomic and clinical aspects of care.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineDiabetes mellitusDemographyPovertyOdds ratioEthnic groupOddsPopulationRural areaResidenceGerontologyEnvironmental healthLogistic regressionInternal medicineEndocrinologySociologyEconomic growthEconomicsPathologyAnthropologyDiabetes Management and EducationDiabetes, Cardiovascular Risks, and LipoproteinsPrimary Care and Health Outcomes
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