Background Secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD) has improved immensely during the past decade but controversies persist on cardiovascular benefits among women with diabetes. We investigated 11-year trends in hospital admission rates for acute myocardial infarction (AMI), stroke, percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), and coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) in people with and without diabetes by gender in England. Methods We identified all hospital admissions for cardiovascular disease causes among people aged 17 years and above between 2004 and 2014 in England. We calculated diabetes-specific and non-diabetes-specific rates for study outcomes by gender. To assess temporal changes, we fitted negative binomial regression mo...
BACKGROUND: Diabetes is a stronger risk factor for cardiovascular complications in women than men. A...
Objective This study aimed to determine changes in absolute and relative socio-economic inequalities...
Background: Mortality after AMI is on the decreasing trend; however, this favorable trend is not obs...
Abstract Background Secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD) has improved immensely duri...
OBJECTIVEdIt is unclear whether people with and without diabetes equally benefitted from reductions ...
International audienceAim. - To investigate whether diabetes confers higher relative risks of cardio...
Objective Women with diabetes have a greater excess risk for cardiovascular diseases (CVD) than men....
BACKGROUND:With recent changes in UK clinical practice for diabetes care, contemporary estimates of ...
Background: With recent changes in UK clinical practice for diabetes care, contemporary estimates o...
OBJECTIVE — To compare recent trends in cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes among men and women wi...
Background: With recent changes in the United Kingdom’s clinical practice for diabetes mellitus c...
BACKGROUND: Women with diabetes mellitus are at particularly high risk for coronary heart disease-re...
BACKGROUND: Diabetes is a stronger risk factor for cardiovascular complications in women than men.AI...
BACKGROUND: Diabetes is a stronger risk factor for cardiovascular complications in women than men. A...
Objective: Diabetes has shown to be a stronger risk factor for myocardial infarction (MI) in women t...
BACKGROUND: Diabetes is a stronger risk factor for cardiovascular complications in women than men. A...
Objective This study aimed to determine changes in absolute and relative socio-economic inequalities...
Background: Mortality after AMI is on the decreasing trend; however, this favorable trend is not obs...
Abstract Background Secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD) has improved immensely duri...
OBJECTIVEdIt is unclear whether people with and without diabetes equally benefitted from reductions ...
International audienceAim. - To investigate whether diabetes confers higher relative risks of cardio...
Objective Women with diabetes have a greater excess risk for cardiovascular diseases (CVD) than men....
BACKGROUND:With recent changes in UK clinical practice for diabetes care, contemporary estimates of ...
Background: With recent changes in UK clinical practice for diabetes care, contemporary estimates o...
OBJECTIVE — To compare recent trends in cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes among men and women wi...
Background: With recent changes in the United Kingdom’s clinical practice for diabetes mellitus c...
BACKGROUND: Women with diabetes mellitus are at particularly high risk for coronary heart disease-re...
BACKGROUND: Diabetes is a stronger risk factor for cardiovascular complications in women than men.AI...
BACKGROUND: Diabetes is a stronger risk factor for cardiovascular complications in women than men. A...
Objective: Diabetes has shown to be a stronger risk factor for myocardial infarction (MI) in women t...
BACKGROUND: Diabetes is a stronger risk factor for cardiovascular complications in women than men. A...
Objective This study aimed to determine changes in absolute and relative socio-economic inequalities...
Background: Mortality after AMI is on the decreasing trend; however, this favorable trend is not obs...