From the Journals

‘Fast food swamps’ linked to type 1 diabetes


 

FROM JOURNAL OF THE ENDOCRINE SOCIETY


In general, the study found that the prevalence of adult and pediatric type 1 diabetes was significantly lower in most black neighborhoods, while the prevalence of adult type 1 diabetes was significantly lower in most Hispanic neighborhoods. Higher-income neighborhoods showed a significantly higher prevalence of pediatric type 1 diabetes.

The prevalence of type 2 diabetes in adults was significantly higher in low-income neighborhoods and those with more elderly residents, while the highest rates of pediatric type 2 diabetes were found in black neighborhoods.

The authors commented that they were surprised that their data did not show a higher prevalence of adult type 2 diabetes in black neighborhoods.

“In our multivariate analysis, older age and lower income were the only demographic or socioeconomic factors associated with higher adult type 2 diabetes prevalence,” they wrote.

Recommended Reading

MDedge Daily News: How European data privacy rules may cost you
MDedge Family Medicine
Metformin reduces preterm births, late miscarriages in PCOS
MDedge Family Medicine
Hope and hype: Inside the push for wearable diabetes technology
MDedge Family Medicine
Sensitivity of vibration-based neuropathy detectors varies widely
MDedge Family Medicine
Being overweight as a child increases the risk of developing diabetes
MDedge Family Medicine
Clearer picture emerging of renal impact of SGLT2s
MDedge Family Medicine
Cardiovascular risk in type 2 diabetes: Patients are often clueless
MDedge Family Medicine
MDedge Daily News: Diabetes patients ignore a deadly risk
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA approves marketing for retinal imaging device that uses artificial intelligence
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Meta-analysis: Mortality, safety data may favor SGLT2 inhibitors in T2DM
MDedge Family Medicine