Cardiovascular risk profile of subjects with known diabetes from the middle- and high-income group population of Delhi: the DEDICOM survey

Aims  To determine the cardiovascular risk profile of known diabetic patients from the middle‐ and high‐income group populace of Delhi. Methods  A cross‐sectional survey was conducted using a probability proportionate to size (systematic) two‐stage cluster design. Thirty areas were selected for a ho...

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Vydané v:Diabetic medicine Ročník 25; číslo 1; s. 27 - 36
Hlavní autori: Nagpal, J., Bhartia, A.
Médium: Journal Article
Jazyk:English
Vydavateľské údaje: Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.01.2008
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Abstract Aims  To determine the cardiovascular risk profile of known diabetic patients from the middle‐ and high‐income group populace of Delhi. Methods  A cross‐sectional survey was conducted using a probability proportionate to size (systematic) two‐stage cluster design. Thirty areas were selected for a house‐to‐house survey to recruit a minimum of 25 subjects (known diabetes ≥ 1 year; 35–65 years of age) per area. Data were collected by interview, blood sampling and from medical records. Scores from the Framingham, Joint British Society, United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study, Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation, and Diabetes Epidemiology: Collaborative Analysis Of Diagnostic Criteria in Europe studies were used to calculate summary estimates of risk for coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke. Results  Eight hundred and nineteen subjects (25–30 per cluster) were enrolled. The mean age of the subjects was 53.6 years, the mean duration since diagnosis was 8.1 years, the mean body mass index was 28.1 kg/m2, with 50.7% women; 74.3% had hypertension, 75.1% dyslipidaemia and 41.8% had poor glycaemic control (HbA1c > 8.0%); 8.4% had already had a myocardial infarction, whereas 2.3% had suffered a stroke. Only 17.6% were taking aspirin, 3.4% were on lipid‐lowering drugs and 11.6% were taking antihypertensive agents. The risk engines estimated a 10‐year CHD risk of 12.6–13.9% and a stroke risk of 5.1–5.7%. Conclusion  The study documents that the cardiovascular profile of known diabetes patients from the middle and higher income groups of Delhi is poor, strengthening the case for targeting interventions at patients, providers and other stakeholders for improvement.
AbstractList Aims  To determine the cardiovascular risk profile of known diabetic patients from the middle‐ and high‐income group populace of Delhi. Methods  A cross‐sectional survey was conducted using a probability proportionate to size (systematic) two‐stage cluster design. Thirty areas were selected for a house‐to‐house survey to recruit a minimum of 25 subjects (known diabetes ≥ 1 year; 35–65 years of age) per area. Data were collected by interview, blood sampling and from medical records. Scores from the Framingham, Joint British Society, United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study, Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation, and Diabetes Epidemiology: Collaborative Analysis Of Diagnostic Criteria in Europe studies were used to calculate summary estimates of risk for coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke. Results  Eight hundred and nineteen subjects (25–30 per cluster) were enrolled. The mean age of the subjects was 53.6 years, the mean duration since diagnosis was 8.1 years, the mean body mass index was 28.1 kg/m 2 , with 50.7% women; 74.3% had hypertension, 75.1% dyslipidaemia and 41.8% had poor glycaemic control (HbA 1c > 8.0%); 8.4% had already had a myocardial infarction, whereas 2.3% had suffered a stroke. Only 17.6% were taking aspirin, 3.4% were on lipid‐lowering drugs and 11.6% were taking antihypertensive agents. The risk engines estimated a 10‐year CHD risk of 12.6–13.9% and a stroke risk of 5.1–5.7%. Conclusion  The study documents that the cardiovascular profile of known diabetes patients from the middle and higher income groups of Delhi is poor, strengthening the case for targeting interventions at patients, providers and other stakeholders for improvement.
To determine the cardiovascular risk profile of known diabetic patients from the middle- and high-income group populace of Delhi. A cross-sectional survey was conducted using a probability proportionate to size (systematic) two-stage cluster design. Thirty areas were selected for a house-to-house survey to recruit a minimum of 25 subjects (known diabetes > or = 1 year; 35-65 years of age) per area. Data were collected by interview, blood sampling and from medical records. Scores from the Framingham, Joint British Society, United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study, Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation, and Diabetes Epidemiology: Collaborative Analysis Of Diagnostic Criteria in Europe studies were used to calculate summary estimates of risk for coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke. Eight hundred and nineteen subjects (25-30 per cluster) were enrolled. The mean age of the subjects was 53.6 years, the mean duration since diagnosis was 8.1 years, the mean body mass index was 28.1 kg/m(2), with 50.7% women; 74.3% had hypertension, 75.1% dyslipidaemia and 41.8% had poor glycaemic control (HbA(1c) > 8.0%); 8.4% had already had a myocardial infarction, whereas 2.3% had suffered a stroke. Only 17.6% were taking aspirin, 3.4% were on lipid-lowering drugs and 11.6% were taking antihypertensive agents. The risk engines estimated a 10-year CHD risk of 12.6-13.9% and a stroke risk of 5.1-5.7%. The study documents that the cardiovascular profile of known diabetes patients from the middle and higher income groups of Delhi is poor, strengthening the case for targeting interventions at patients, providers and other stakeholders for improvement.
Aims  To determine the cardiovascular risk profile of known diabetic patients from the middle‐ and high‐income group populace of Delhi. Methods  A cross‐sectional survey was conducted using a probability proportionate to size (systematic) two‐stage cluster design. Thirty areas were selected for a house‐to‐house survey to recruit a minimum of 25 subjects (known diabetes ≥ 1 year; 35–65 years of age) per area. Data were collected by interview, blood sampling and from medical records. Scores from the Framingham, Joint British Society, United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study, Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation, and Diabetes Epidemiology: Collaborative Analysis Of Diagnostic Criteria in Europe studies were used to calculate summary estimates of risk for coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke. Results  Eight hundred and nineteen subjects (25–30 per cluster) were enrolled. The mean age of the subjects was 53.6 years, the mean duration since diagnosis was 8.1 years, the mean body mass index was 28.1 kg/m2, with 50.7% women; 74.3% had hypertension, 75.1% dyslipidaemia and 41.8% had poor glycaemic control (HbA1c > 8.0%); 8.4% had already had a myocardial infarction, whereas 2.3% had suffered a stroke. Only 17.6% were taking aspirin, 3.4% were on lipid‐lowering drugs and 11.6% were taking antihypertensive agents. The risk engines estimated a 10‐year CHD risk of 12.6–13.9% and a stroke risk of 5.1–5.7%. Conclusion  The study documents that the cardiovascular profile of known diabetes patients from the middle and higher income groups of Delhi is poor, strengthening the case for targeting interventions at patients, providers and other stakeholders for improvement.
To determine the cardiovascular risk profile of known diabetic patients from the middle- and high-income group populace of Delhi.AIMSTo determine the cardiovascular risk profile of known diabetic patients from the middle- and high-income group populace of Delhi.A cross-sectional survey was conducted using a probability proportionate to size (systematic) two-stage cluster design. Thirty areas were selected for a house-to-house survey to recruit a minimum of 25 subjects (known diabetes > or = 1 year; 35-65 years of age) per area. Data were collected by interview, blood sampling and from medical records. Scores from the Framingham, Joint British Society, United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study, Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation, and Diabetes Epidemiology: Collaborative Analysis Of Diagnostic Criteria in Europe studies were used to calculate summary estimates of risk for coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke.METHODSA cross-sectional survey was conducted using a probability proportionate to size (systematic) two-stage cluster design. Thirty areas were selected for a house-to-house survey to recruit a minimum of 25 subjects (known diabetes > or = 1 year; 35-65 years of age) per area. Data were collected by interview, blood sampling and from medical records. Scores from the Framingham, Joint British Society, United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study, Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation, and Diabetes Epidemiology: Collaborative Analysis Of Diagnostic Criteria in Europe studies were used to calculate summary estimates of risk for coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke.Eight hundred and nineteen subjects (25-30 per cluster) were enrolled. The mean age of the subjects was 53.6 years, the mean duration since diagnosis was 8.1 years, the mean body mass index was 28.1 kg/m(2), with 50.7% women; 74.3% had hypertension, 75.1% dyslipidaemia and 41.8% had poor glycaemic control (HbA(1c) > 8.0%); 8.4% had already had a myocardial infarction, whereas 2.3% had suffered a stroke. Only 17.6% were taking aspirin, 3.4% were on lipid-lowering drugs and 11.6% were taking antihypertensive agents. The risk engines estimated a 10-year CHD risk of 12.6-13.9% and a stroke risk of 5.1-5.7%.RESULTSEight hundred and nineteen subjects (25-30 per cluster) were enrolled. The mean age of the subjects was 53.6 years, the mean duration since diagnosis was 8.1 years, the mean body mass index was 28.1 kg/m(2), with 50.7% women; 74.3% had hypertension, 75.1% dyslipidaemia and 41.8% had poor glycaemic control (HbA(1c) > 8.0%); 8.4% had already had a myocardial infarction, whereas 2.3% had suffered a stroke. Only 17.6% were taking aspirin, 3.4% were on lipid-lowering drugs and 11.6% were taking antihypertensive agents. The risk engines estimated a 10-year CHD risk of 12.6-13.9% and a stroke risk of 5.1-5.7%.The study documents that the cardiovascular profile of known diabetes patients from the middle and higher income groups of Delhi is poor, strengthening the case for targeting interventions at patients, providers and other stakeholders for improvement.CONCLUSIONThe study documents that the cardiovascular profile of known diabetes patients from the middle and higher income groups of Delhi is poor, strengthening the case for targeting interventions at patients, providers and other stakeholders for improvement.
Author Nagpal, J.
Bhartia, A.
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Issue 1
Keywords Endocrinopathy
Type 2 diabetes
Human
Obesity
Nutrition
community survey
Nutrition disorder
Income
Metabolic diseases
Cardiovascular disease
Statistical study
Survey
Population survey
Risk factor
Cardiovascular risk
Population
Community
Endocrinology
Nutritional status
Public health
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PublicationTitle Diabetic medicine
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Snippet Aims  To determine the cardiovascular risk profile of known diabetic patients from the middle‐ and high‐income group populace of Delhi. Methods  A...
Aims  To determine the cardiovascular risk profile of known diabetic patients from the middle‐ and high‐income group populace of Delhi. Methods  A...
To determine the cardiovascular risk profile of known diabetic patients from the middle- and high-income group populace of Delhi. A cross-sectional survey was...
To determine the cardiovascular risk profile of known diabetic patients from the middle- and high-income group populace of Delhi.AIMSTo determine the...
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StartPage 27
SubjectTerms Adult
Biological and medical sciences
Body Mass Index
cardiovascular risk
community survey
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 - epidemiology
Diabetes. Impaired glucose tolerance
Diabetic Angiopathies - epidemiology
Endocrine pancreas. Apud cells (diseases)
Endocrinopathies
Epidemiologic Methods
Etiopathogenesis. Screening. Investigations. Target tissue resistance
Feeding. Feeding behavior
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Income
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Obesity - epidemiology
Socioeconomic Factors
Stroke - epidemiology
Stroke - prevention & control
Type 2 diabetes
Vertebrates: anatomy and physiology, studies on body, several organs or systems
Vertebrates: endocrinology
Title Cardiovascular risk profile of subjects with known diabetes from the middle- and high-income group population of Delhi: the DEDICOM survey
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https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111%2Fj.1464-5491.2007.02307.x
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18028441
https://www.proquest.com/docview/70209284
Volume 25
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