States bear substantial responsibility for addressing the rising rates of diabetes and prediabetes in the United States. However, accurate state-level estimates of diabetes and prediabetes prevalence that include undiagnosed cases have been impossible to produce with traditional sources of state-level data. Various new and nontraditional sources for estimating state-level prevalence are now available. These include surveys with expanded samples that can support state-level estimation in some states and administrative and clinical data from insurance claims and electronic health records. These sources pose methodologic challenges because they typically cover partial, sometimes nonrandom subpopulations; they do not always use the same measure...
In recent decades, the United States experienced increasing prevalence and incidence of diabetes, ac...
OBJECTIVEdHealth administrative data are frequently used for diabetes surveillance, but vali-dation ...
OBJECTIVE — To project the number of people with diagnosed diabetes in the U.S. through 2050, accoun...
Abstract Background Current US surveillance data provide estimates of diabetes using laboratory test...
Background: Current US surveillance data provide estimates of diabetes using laboratory tests at the...
BACKGROUND: Current US surveillance data provide estimates of diabetes using laboratory tests at the...
PurposeThe measurement and estimation of diabetes in populations guides resource allocation, health ...
Diabetes Mellitus affects 8.3% of the U.S. population and the prevalence, particularly of type 2 dia...
In the United States, diabetes is common and costly. Programs to prevent new cases of diabetes are o...
PurposeThe measurement and estimation of diabetes in populations guides resource allocation, health ...
IntroductionUnderserved populations have been overlooked or underrepresented in research based on da...
This document is intended to provide up-to-date scientific data and statistics on diabetes and its b...
This new policy brief from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research presents diabetes prevalence r...
OBJECTIVE — We examined the prevalences of diagnosed diabetes, and undiagnosed dia-betes and pre-dia...
The elimination of health disparities in the United States is a national priority and overriding goa...
In recent decades, the United States experienced increasing prevalence and incidence of diabetes, ac...
OBJECTIVEdHealth administrative data are frequently used for diabetes surveillance, but vali-dation ...
OBJECTIVE — To project the number of people with diagnosed diabetes in the U.S. through 2050, accoun...
Abstract Background Current US surveillance data provide estimates of diabetes using laboratory test...
Background: Current US surveillance data provide estimates of diabetes using laboratory tests at the...
BACKGROUND: Current US surveillance data provide estimates of diabetes using laboratory tests at the...
PurposeThe measurement and estimation of diabetes in populations guides resource allocation, health ...
Diabetes Mellitus affects 8.3% of the U.S. population and the prevalence, particularly of type 2 dia...
In the United States, diabetes is common and costly. Programs to prevent new cases of diabetes are o...
PurposeThe measurement and estimation of diabetes in populations guides resource allocation, health ...
IntroductionUnderserved populations have been overlooked or underrepresented in research based on da...
This document is intended to provide up-to-date scientific data and statistics on diabetes and its b...
This new policy brief from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research presents diabetes prevalence r...
OBJECTIVE — We examined the prevalences of diagnosed diabetes, and undiagnosed dia-betes and pre-dia...
The elimination of health disparities in the United States is a national priority and overriding goa...
In recent decades, the United States experienced increasing prevalence and incidence of diabetes, ac...
OBJECTIVEdHealth administrative data are frequently used for diabetes surveillance, but vali-dation ...
OBJECTIVE — To project the number of people with diagnosed diabetes in the U.S. through 2050, accoun...