The contribution of diabetes to early deaths from ischemic heart disease: US gender and racial comparisons

American Journal of Public Health
J C Will, M L Casper

Abstract

We evaluated the contribution of diabetes mellitus to premature ischemic heart disease mortality among US race- and gender-specific groups in 1986. Among persons aged 45 to 64 years, we examined ischemic heart disease death rates (corrected for underreporting of diabetes on death certificates) by diabetes status and calculated the population attributable risk due to diabetes for each group. Diabetes increased the ischemic heart disease death rate by 9 to 10 times for women but by only 2 to 3 times for men. Racial differences in ischemic heart disease mortality attributable to diabetes were greater for women (Blacks = 39%; Whites = 27%) than for men (Blacks = 19%; Whites = 14%). These discrepancies in the contribution of diabetes to ischemic heart disease mortality warrant further study.

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Citations

Apr 13, 1999·Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice·A H ZargarM I Bashir
Sep 28, 2002·JONA'S Healthcare Law, Ethics and Regulation·Michael Ambrose Erasmus McIntosh
Jun 26, 2007·BMC Genomics·Thewarach LahaAlex Loukas
Jul 25, 2012·Journal of Cardiovascular Translational Research·Fawzi A BabikerFrits W Prinzen
Aug 10, 1999·Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care·P E Wändell
Nov 18, 2005·American Heart Journal·Masoor KamaleshEric Peterson
Jul 28, 2005·Diabetes·Andrew TsangDerek M Yellon
Feb 22, 2008·Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology·Ramesh NatarajanAlpha A Fowler

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