Aims: to estimate the age-specific prevalence of diabetes mellitus in elderly people in Canada, and to examine the effect of method of ascertainment on the estimation of prevalence. Method: three measures of diabetes were used in a secondary analysis of the Canadian Study of Health and Aging - a 1991 nation-wide cross-sectional study of the prevalence of dementia in a sample of 10,263 elderly subjects (aged 65-106 years). Results: of community-dwelling subjects, 10.3% reported diabetes. Supplementing this information with clinical reports and random plasma glucose measurements increased the prevalence to 12.0% in the community, 17.5% in institutions and 12.4% overall. Conclusion: diabetes is common in elderly people, although the prevalence falls in the very elderly. The method of ascertainment influences estimation of prevalence.
CITATION STYLE
Rockwood, K., Tan, M. H., Phillips, S., & Mcdowell, I. (1998). Prevalence of diabetes mellitus in elderly people in Canada: Report from the Canadian Study of Health and Aging. Age and Ageing, 27(5), 573–577. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/27.5.573
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