Department of Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, Royal University Hospital, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
CMAJ. 2010 Feb 23;182(3):249-56. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.090846. Epub 2010 Jan 18.
First Nations people in Canada experience a disproportionate burden of type 2 diabetes mellitus. To increase our understanding of this evolving epidemic, we compared the epidemiology of diabetes between First Nations and non-First Nations adults in Saskatchewan from 1980 to 2005.
We used administrative databases to perform a population-based study of diabetes frequency, incidence and prevalence in adults by ethnic background, year, age and sex.
We identified 8275 First Nations and 82,306 non-First Nations people with diabetes from 1980 to 2005. Overall, the incidence and prevalence of diabetes were more than 4 times higher among First Nations women than among non-First Nations women and more than 2.5 times higher among First Nations men than among non-First Nations men. The number of incident cases of diabetes was highest among First Nations people aged 40-49, while the number among non-First Nations people was greatest in those aged 70 or more years. The prevalence of diabetes increased over the study period from 9.5% to 20.3% among First Nations women and from 4.9% to 16.0% among First Nations men. Among non-First Nations people, the prevalence increased from 2.0% to 5.5% among women and from 2.0% to 6.2% among men. By 2005, almost 50% of First Nations women and more than 40% of First Nations men aged 60 or older had diabetes, compared with less than 25% of non-First Nations men and less than 20% of non-First Nations women aged 80 or older.
First Nations adults are experiencing a diabetes epidemic that disproportionately affects women during their reproductive years. This ethnicity-based pattern suggests diverse underlying mechanisms that may include differences in the diabetogenic impact of gestational diabetes.
加拿大的第一民族人群患有 2 型糖尿病的比例不成比例。为了更深入地了解这种不断演变的流行病,我们比较了 1980 年至 2005 年期间萨斯喀彻温省第一民族和非第一民族成年人的糖尿病流行病学。
我们使用行政数据库,根据种族背景、年份、年龄和性别,对成年人的糖尿病发病率、发病率和患病率进行了基于人群的研究。
我们从 1980 年至 2005 年期间发现了 8275 名第一民族和 82306 名非第一民族糖尿病患者。总体而言,第一民族女性的糖尿病发病率和患病率比非第一民族女性高 4 倍以上,男性比非第一民族男性高 2.5 倍以上。40-49 岁的第一民族人发生糖尿病的人数最多,而非第一民族人发生糖尿病的人数最多的是 70 岁或以上的人。在研究期间,第一民族女性的糖尿病患病率从 9.5%上升到 20.3%,男性从 4.9%上升到 16.0%。而非第一民族女性的患病率从 2.0%上升到 5.5%,男性从 2.0%上升到 6.2%。到 2005 年,近 50%的第一民族女性和超过 40%的 60 岁或以上的第一民族男性患有糖尿病,而非第一民族男性中这一比例不到 25%,80 岁或以上的非第一民族女性中这一比例不到 20%。
第一民族成年人正在经历一场糖尿病流行,这在很大程度上影响了女性在生育期的健康。这种基于种族的模式表明存在不同的潜在机制,其中可能包括妊娠糖尿病对糖尿病的致病影响的差异。