Findings demonstrate need for improved care, especially among youth, some minorities
 
More  people are meeting recommended goals in the three key markers of diabetes  control, according to a study conducted and funded by the National Institutes  of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The  report, published online February 15 in 
Diabetes Care, shows that, from 1988 to  2010, the number of people with diabetes able to meet or exceed all three of  the measures that demonstrate good diabetes management rose from about 2  percent to about 19 percent.  Each measure also showed substantial  improvement, with over half of people meeting each individual goal in 2010. 
The  measures are 
A1C
 — which assesses blood sugar (glucose) over the previous three  months — blood pressure and cholesterol. They are often called the ABCs of diabetes.  When these measures fall outside healthy ranges, people are more likely to be  burdened by complications of diabetes, including heart disease, stroke, kidney  disease, blindness, and amputation.
Despite  improvement, the results show continued need for better diabetes control. In  particular, young people and some minority groups were below average in meeting  the goals.
To  gauge diabetes management, researchers analyzed data from the  National  Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys
 from 1988-1994  and 1999-2010. 
“The  most impressive finding was the significant improvement in diabetes management  over time across all groups,” said Catherine Cowie, Ph.D., the study’s senior  author and director of the Diabetes Epidemiology Program at the National  Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK), which  conducted and funded the study. “However, we see a lot of room for improvement,  for everyone, but particularly for younger people and some minority groups.”
According  to 2007-2010 data on Americans with diabetes: 
        - 53  percent met A1C goals, compared to 43 percent in 1988-1994 data
 
        - 51  percent met blood pressure goals, compared to 33 percent in 1988-1994 data
 
        - 56  percent met cholesterol goals, compared to 10 percent in 1988-1994 data
 
      
Improved  cholesterol control was likely due to the increase in the use of statins, a  type of cholesterol-lowering drug, from about 4 percent of people with diabetes  during 1988-1994 to 51 percent during 2007-2010. Glucose control was worse in  Mexican-Americans and in younger adults.  Only 44 percent of  Mexican-Americans met A1C goals, versus 53 percent of whites and blacks in  2007-2010 data. People between 20-49 years old were less likely to meet A1C  goals than older people. 
“It  is particularly disturbing that good control was seen less frequently in young  people,” said Judith Fradkin, M.D., director of the NIDDK Division of Diabetes,  Endocrinology, and Metabolic Diseases. “Research has shown that good diabetes  control early in the course of disease has long-lasting benefits reducing the  risk of complications.  For people with long life expectancy after  diagnosis of diabetes, it’s especially important to focus on meeting diabetes  management goals as early as possible, because with that longer life comes a greater  chance of developing complications if they do not control their diabetes.”
“Not  only do Mexican-Americans and non-Hispanic blacks have higher rates of  diabetes,  members of these groups who develop diabetes also have poorer  health outcomes,” said the paper’s first author, Sarah Stark Casagrande, Ph.D.,  an epidemiologist from Social & Scientific Systems Inc., Silver Spring,  Md., whose work is supported by NIDDK. “While diabetes control has improved in  these populations, some disparities remain, demonstrating the need for improved  management of the disease to prevent its devastating complications.”
 Goals for A1C, blood pressure, and cholesterol must be individualized for  people with diabetes, as effects of diabetes can differ depending on a person’s  age, type of diabetes, diabetes medications, complications from diabetes, and  other factors.
 For A1C, a goal for many people is below 7 percent. It is particularly  important for people with long life expectancies to control A1C to protect  against eye, nerve, and kidney disease in the future. Goals can be less  stringent for people with limited life expectancy, since complications develop  over time. For blood pressure,  the goal for most people is 130/80. Moderate- or high-dose statin therapy is  recommended for people over 40 with diabetes, with a goal of keeping the  low-density lipoprotein (LDL) — sometimes called bad cholesterol — less than  100 milligrams per deciliter. Control of blood pressure and cholesterol are  particularly important for lowering cardiovascular risk.
About 26 million Americans have diabetes, and another 79 million have  prediabetes, a condition that places them at increased risk for developing type  2 diabetes and heart disease. Between 1988 and 2012, the prevalence of  diagnosed diabetes has more than doubled, from nearly 4 percent of the U.S.  population to nearly 9 percent, according to data from the Centers for Disease  Control and Prevention.
To help people improve their health, the National  Diabetes Education Program (NDEP),  an initiative of the NIH and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is  working to assist people in making positive, lasting changes to improve their  health. NDEP’s  Make A Plan tool can help make these changes become part of a daily routine to support people in  reaching their health goals. The NIDDK's National Diabetes Information  Clearinghouse creates and promotes research-based health information and campaigns for the  public. Among many publications, the A1C Test and Diabetes explains how this important test can help with diagnosis and management of  diabetes. 
 The study, Meeting ABC goals among persons with diabetes, was funded by NIH  contract GS-10F-0381L. The CDC also contributed to this study.
 
 
 
The NIDDK, a component  of the NIH, conducts and supports research on diabetes and other endocrine and  metabolic diseases; digestive diseases, nutrition and obesity; and kidney,  urologic and hematologic diseases. Spanning the full spectrum of medicine and  afflicting people of all ages and ethnic groups, these diseases encompass some  of the most common, severe and disabling conditions affecting Americans. For  more information about the NIDDK and its programs, see http://www.niddk.nih.gov.
      
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