New England Research Institutes, Inc., Watertown, MA 02472, USA.
Med Care Res Rev. 2012 Apr;69(2):176-93. doi: 10.1177/1077558711429010. Epub 2011 Dec 6.
Data from the Boston Area Community Health Survey show that both undiagnosed signs and symptoms and diagnosed type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) are patterned by socioeconomic status (SES). Such patterning is corroborated by National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey data for diagnosed T2DM. Complementary data from an experiment concerning clinical decision making show T2DM is patterned by race/ethnicity, following diagnosis by a physician. Undiagnosed signs and symptoms of T2DM in the community are patterned by SES (rather than race/ethnicity), but following diagnosis by primary care physicians they are patterned more by race/ethnicity (rather than by SES). Race/ethnicity and SES in the United States are almost totally confounded, such that measuring one is essentially also measuring the other. Physician patterning of T2DM by race/ethnicity, however, motivates the search for genetic and biophysiologic explanations and distracts attention from the more important contribution of SES circumstances to the prevalence of diabetes mellitus.
波士顿地区社区健康调查的数据显示,未确诊的体征和症状以及已确诊的 2 型糖尿病(T2DM)都呈现出社会经济地位(SES)的模式。国家健康和营养检查调查的数据证实了已确诊的 T2DM 的这种模式。关于临床决策的实验提供了互补数据,表明 T2DM 在被医生诊断后,也呈现出种族/民族的模式。社区中未确诊的 T2DM 体征和症状呈现 SES(而不是种族/民族)的模式,但在初级保健医生诊断后,它们更多地呈现出种族/民族(而不是 SES)的模式。美国的种族/民族和 SES 几乎完全混淆,因此衡量一个因素实际上也在衡量另一个因素。然而,医生根据种族/民族对 T2DM 的模式化分类,促使人们寻找遗传和生物物理解释,并分散了对 SES 环境对糖尿病患病率更重要贡献的注意力。