Predictors of diabetes and diabetes-related hospitalisations were examined in 15-88-year-old Aboriginal Australians (256 women, 258 men), surveyed in 1988-1989. Linkage to death records and hospitalisations to 2002 allowed proportional hazards or negative binomial modelling. Forty-five men (18%) and 59 women (24%) developed diabetes. Risk of diabetes was predicted positively by waist girth (hazard ratio (HR) 1.08, 95% CI 1.04, 1.13), smoking (HR 2.05, 95% CI 1.23, 3.39) and eating processed meats > 4 times/month (HR 1.58, 95% CI 1.05, 2.40) and negatively by lower alcohol intake (HR 0.69, 95%CI 0.49, 0.99), preferring wine (HR 0.13,95% CI 0.02,0.97) and eating bush meats > 4 times/month (HR 0.34,95% CI 0.13,0.90). Hospitalisation was predic...
Introduction: For Aboriginal populations, predicting individuals at risk of cardiovascular disease (...
Introduction: For Aboriginal populations, predicting individuals at risk of cardiovascular disease (...
Introduction: For Aboriginal populations, predicting individuals at risk of cardiovascular disease (...
To predict in an Australian Aboriginal community, the 10-year absolute risk of type 2 diabetes assoc...
Abstract Background Diabetes is an important contributor to the health inequity between Aboriginal a...
To predict in an Australian Aboriginal community, the 10-year absolute risk of type 2 diabetes assoc...
<div><p>Objectives</p><p>To predict in an Australian Aboriginal community, the 10-year absolute risk...
Objective: To estimate the incidence of type 2 diabetes in two ethnically distinct Indigenous popula...
Objective: To estimate the incidence of type 2 diabetes in two ethnically distinct Indigenous popula...
Objective: To estimate the incidence of type 2 diabetes in two ethnically distinct Indigenous popula...
Diabetes is a major public health problem for Aboriginal Australians. We wished to determine the ext...
Aims: To quantify the risk of hospitalization for infections in Indigenous Australian adults with di...
Background and aims: Coronary disease (CHD)-related hospital admission is more common among indigeno...
Objectives To predict in an Australian Aboriginal community, the 10-year absolute risk of type 2 dia...
Introduction: For Aboriginal populations, predicting individuals at risk of cardiovascular disease (...
Introduction: For Aboriginal populations, predicting individuals at risk of cardiovascular disease (...
Introduction: For Aboriginal populations, predicting individuals at risk of cardiovascular disease (...
Introduction: For Aboriginal populations, predicting individuals at risk of cardiovascular disease (...
To predict in an Australian Aboriginal community, the 10-year absolute risk of type 2 diabetes assoc...
Abstract Background Diabetes is an important contributor to the health inequity between Aboriginal a...
To predict in an Australian Aboriginal community, the 10-year absolute risk of type 2 diabetes assoc...
<div><p>Objectives</p><p>To predict in an Australian Aboriginal community, the 10-year absolute risk...
Objective: To estimate the incidence of type 2 diabetes in two ethnically distinct Indigenous popula...
Objective: To estimate the incidence of type 2 diabetes in two ethnically distinct Indigenous popula...
Objective: To estimate the incidence of type 2 diabetes in two ethnically distinct Indigenous popula...
Diabetes is a major public health problem for Aboriginal Australians. We wished to determine the ext...
Aims: To quantify the risk of hospitalization for infections in Indigenous Australian adults with di...
Background and aims: Coronary disease (CHD)-related hospital admission is more common among indigeno...
Objectives To predict in an Australian Aboriginal community, the 10-year absolute risk of type 2 dia...
Introduction: For Aboriginal populations, predicting individuals at risk of cardiovascular disease (...
Introduction: For Aboriginal populations, predicting individuals at risk of cardiovascular disease (...
Introduction: For Aboriginal populations, predicting individuals at risk of cardiovascular disease (...
Introduction: For Aboriginal populations, predicting individuals at risk of cardiovascular disease (...