Prevalence of diabetes mellitus in elderly people in Canada: Report from the Canadian Study of Health and Aging

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Abstract

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.

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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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