School of Rural and Northern Health (Walker), Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ont.; ICES Central (Walker, Shah), Toronto, Ont.; Department of Family Medicine (Slater, Green) and Health Services and Policy Research Institute (Frymire), Queen's University, Kingston, Ont.; Chiefs of Ontario (Jones), Toronto, Ont.; ICES Queen's (Frymire, Khan, Green), Kingston, Ont.; Memory Keepers Medical Discovery Team (Jacklin), Department of Family Medicine and Biobehavioral Health, University of Minnesota Medical School, Duluth, Minn.
CMAJ. 2020 Feb 10;192(6):E128-E135. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.190836.
Diabetes mellitus is an established health concern in First Nations communities and is associated with complex influences of colonization. This study, a partnership between First Nations and academic researchers, was undertaken to determine patterns of diabetes prevalence, incidence and mortality in Ontario.
Using health services and population data from Ontario for 1995 to 2014, linked with the federal Indian Register, we calculated age- and sex-adjusted annual estimates of diabetes prevalence, incidence and mortality for First Nations people (living within and outside First Nations communities) and other people in Ontario. We also examined age- and sex-specific crude diabetes prevalence.
Between 1995 and 2014, the prevalence of diabetes increased and the incidence decreased somewhat in all populations. Both prevalence and incidence were substantially higher among First Nations people than among other people in Ontario. In particular, First Nations women had higher prevalence than other women (4.2% v. 1.6% for ages 20-34 yr and 17.6% v. 6.0% for ages 35-49 yr). The lifetime risk of diabetes was higher among First Nations people than among other people in Ontario (57.0%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 56.3%-57.6% v. 44.5%, 95% CI 44.4%-44.6%). Over time, all-cause mortality for those with diabetes declined but remained consistently higher for First Nations people than for other people in Ontario.
Diabetes is more common among First Nations people than among other people in Ontario, particularly at younger ages and in women. First Nations-led approaches to address the high prevalence of diabetes in younger First Nations women have the potential to improve metabolic health across generations.
糖尿病是原住民社区中已确定的健康问题,与殖民化的复杂影响有关。这项由原住民和学术研究人员合作进行的研究旨在确定安大略省糖尿病患病率、发病率和死亡率的模式。
我们利用安大略省 1995 年至 2014 年的卫生服务和人口数据,并与联邦印第安人登记处相联系,计算了安大略省原住民(居住在原住民社区内外)和其他居民的年龄和性别调整后的糖尿病患病率、发病率和死亡率的年度估计值。我们还检查了特定年龄和性别的粗糖尿病患病率。
在 1995 年至 2014 年间,所有人群的糖尿病患病率增加,发病率略有下降。原住民的患病率和发病率均明显高于安大略省的其他居民。特别是,原住民女性的患病率高于其他女性(20-34 岁年龄组为 4.2%,35-49 岁年龄组为 17.6%,而其他女性为 1.6%和 6.0%)。原住民的终生患糖尿病风险高于安大略省的其他居民(57.0%,95%置信区间[CI]56.3%-57.6%比 44.5%,95%CI 44.4%-44.6%)。随着时间的推移,糖尿病患者的全因死亡率下降,但原住民的死亡率仍持续高于安大略省的其他居民。
糖尿病在原住民中比在安大略省的其他居民中更为常见,尤其是在年轻人群中和女性中。以原住民为主导的方法来解决年轻原住民女性中糖尿病的高患病率,有可能改善代际间的代谢健康。