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Metabolic syndrome among New York City (NYC) adults: change in prevalence from 2004 to 2013-2014 using New York City Health and Nutrition Examination Survey

Kanchi, Rania; Perlman, Sharon E; Tabaei, Bahman; Schwartz, Mark D; Islam, Nadia; Chernov, Claudia; Osinubi, Adeiyewunmi; Thorpe, Lorna E
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:In this study we aim to estimate the change in metabolic syndrome (MetS) prevalence among New York City (NYC) adults between 2004 and 2013-2014 and identify key subgroups at risk. METHODS:We analyzed data from NYC Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. MetS was defined as having at least three of the following: abdominal obesity, low HDL, elevated triglycerides, glucose dysregulation, and elevated blood pressure. We calculated age-standardized MetS prevalence, change in prevalence over time, and prevalence ratios by gender and race/ethnicity groups. We also tested for additive interaction. RESULTS:In 2013-2014 MetS prevalence among NYC adults was 24.4% (95% CI, 21.4-27.6). Adults 65+ years and Asian adults had the highest prevalence (45.6% and 33.8%, respectively). Abdominal obesity was the most prevalent MetS component in 2004 and 2013-2014 (50.7% each time). Between 2004 and 2013-2014, MetS decreased by 18.2% (P = .04) among women. The decrease paralleled similar declines in elevated triglycerides and glucose dysregulation. In 2013-14, non-Latino Black women had higher risk of MetS than non-Latino Black men and non-Latino White adults. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Age and racial/ethnic disparities in MetS prevalence in NYC were persistent from 2004 to 2013-2014, with Asian adults and non-Latino Black women at particularly high risk.
PMID: 33647391
ISSN: 1873-2585
CID: 4828682

Geographic Differences in Uncontrolled Chronic Medical Conditions-Reply [Comment]

Baum, Aaron; Siu, Albert L; Schwartz, Mark D
PMID: 33591344
ISSN: 1538-3598
CID: 4799872

Reduced In-Person and Increased Telehealth Outpatient Visits During the COVID-19 Pandemic [Letter]

Baum, Aaron; Kaboli, Peter J; Schwartz, Mark D
PMID: 32776780
ISSN: 1539-3704
CID: 4557082

Effects of the Co-occurrence of Diabetes Mellitus and Tooth Loss on Cognitive Function

Luo, Huabin; Tan, Chenxin; Adhikari, Samrachana; Plassman, Brenda L; Kamer, Angela R; Sloan, Frank A; Schwartz, Mark D; Qi, Xiang; Wu, Bei
OBJECTIVE:Both diabetes mellitus (DM) and poor oral health are common chronic conditions and risk factors of Alzheimer's disease and related dementia among older adults. This study assessed the effects of DM and complete tooth loss (TL) on cognitive function, accounting for their interactions. METHODS:Longitudinal data were obtained from the 2006, 2012, and 2018 waves of the Health and Retirement Study. This cohort study included 7,805 respondents aged 65 years or older with 18,331 person-year observations. DM and complete TL were self-reported. Cognitive function was measured by the Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status. Random-effect regressions were used to test the associations, overall and stratified by sex. RESULTS:Compared with older adults without neither DM nor complete TL, those with both conditions (b = -1.35, 95% confidence interval [CI]: -1.68, -1.02), with complete TL alone (b = -0.67, 95% CI: -0.88, -0.45), or with DM alone (b = -0.40, 95% CI: -0.59, -0.22), had lower cognitive scores. The impact of having both conditions was significantly greater than that of having DM alone (p < .001) or complete TL alone (p = 0.001). Sex-stratified analyses showed the effects were similar in males and females, except having DM alone was not significant in males. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The co-occurrence of DM and complete TL poses an additive risk for cognition. Healthcare and family-care providers should pay attention to the cognitive health of patients with both DM and complete TL. Continued efforts are needed to improve older adults' access to dental care, especially for individuals with DM.
PMID: 34951384
ISSN: 1875-5828
CID: 5109162

Implementation Fidelity of a Complex Behavioral Intervention to Prevent Diabetes Mellitus in Two Safety Net Patient-Centered Medical Homes in New York City [Meeting Abstract]

Gupta, Avni; Hu, Jiyuan; Huang, Shengnan; Diaz, Laura; Gore, Radhika; Islam, Nadia; Schwartz, Mark
ISI:000695816000049
ISSN: 0017-9124
CID: 5265982

EFFECTS OF THE CO-OCCURRENCE OF DIABETES AND TOOTH LOSS ON COGNITIVE FUNCTION [Meeting Abstract]

Luo, Huabin; Tan, Chenxin; Plassman, Brenda; Sloan, Frank; Schwartz, Mark; Adhikari, Samrachana; Qi, Xiang; Wu, Bei
ISI:000842009901050
ISSN: 2399-5300
CID: 5388252

THE IMPACT OF DIABETES AND EDENTULISM ON ALL-CAUSE MORTALITY: RACIAL AND ETHNIC DISPARITIES [Meeting Abstract]

Tan, Chenxin; Luo, Huabin; Sloan, Frank; Plassman, Brenda; Adhikari, Samrachana; Schwartz, Mark; Qi, Xiang; Wu, Bei
ISI:000842009901049
ISSN: 2399-5300
CID: 5388242

Taking a stand against the politicization of medical research: How "swinging the pendulum" poses a hazard to clinical trials, study participants, and the progress of science

Bershteyn, Anna; Schwartz, Mark D; Thorpe, Lorna E; Paasche-Orlow, Michael K; Kissinger, Patricia; Stankiewicz Karita, Helen C; Laufer, Miriam K; Hoffman, Risa M; Landovitz, Raphael J; Paolino, Kristopher; Barnabas, Ruanne V
PMID: 33284056
ISSN: 1744-8409
CID: 4708582

US veterans administration diabetes risk (VADR) national cohort: cohort profile

Avramovic, Sanja; Alemi, Farrokh; Kanchi, Rania; Lopez, Priscilla M; Hayes, Richard B; Thorpe, Lorna E; Schwartz, Mark D
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The veterans administration diabetes risk (VADR) cohort facilitates studies on temporal and geographic patterns of pre-diabetes and diabetes, as well as targeted studies of their predictors. The cohort provides an infrastructure for examination of novel individual and community-level risk factors for diabetes and their consequences among veterans. This cohort also establishes a baseline against which to assess the impact of national or regional strategies to prevent diabetes in veterans. PARTICIPANTS/METHODS:The VADR cohort includes all 6 082 018 veterans in the USA enrolled in the veteran administration (VA) for primary care who were diabetes-free as of 1 January 2008 and who had at least two diabetes-free visits to a VA primary care service at least 30 days apart within any 5-year period since 1 January 2003, or veterans subsequently enrolled and were diabetes-free at cohort entry through 31 December 2016. Cohort subjects were followed from the date of cohort entry until censure defined as date of incident diabetes, loss to follow-up of 2 years, death or until 31 December 2018. FINDINGS TO DATE/UNASSIGNED:The incidence rate of type 2 diabetes in this cohort of over 6 million veterans followed for a median of 5.5 years (over 35 million person-years (PY)) was 26 per 1000 PY. During the study period, 8.5% of the cohort were lost to follow-up and 17.7% died. Many demographic, comorbidity and other clinical variables were more prevalent among patients with incident diabetes. FUTURE PLANS/UNASSIGNED:This cohort will be used to study community-level risk factors for diabetes, such as attributes of the food environment and neighbourhood socioeconomic status via geospatial linkage to residence address information.
PMID: 33277282
ISSN: 2044-6055
CID: 4712412

Association of Geographic Differences in Prevalence of Uncontrolled Chronic Conditions With Changes in Individuals' Likelihood of Uncontrolled Chronic Conditions

Baum, Aaron; Wisnivesky, Juan; Basu, Sanjay; Siu, Albert L; Schwartz, Mark D
Importance:The prevalence of leading risk factors for morbidity and mortality in the US significantly varies across regions, states, and neighborhoods, but the extent these differences are associated with a person's place of residence vs the characteristics of the people who live in different places remains unclear. Objective:To estimate the degree to which geographic differences in leading risk factors are associated with a person's place of residence by comparing trends in health outcomes among individuals who moved to different areas or did not move. Design, Setting, and Participants:This retrospective cohort study estimated the association between the differences in the prevalence of uncontrolled chronic conditions across movers' destination and origin zip codes and changes in individuals' likelihood of uncontrolled chronic conditions after moving, adjusting for person-specific fixed effects, the duration of time since the move, and secular trends among movers and those who did not move. Electronic health records from the Veterans Health Administration were analyzed. The primary analysis included 5 342 207 individuals with at least 1 Veterans Health Administration outpatient encounter between 2008 and 2018 who moved zip codes exactly once or never moved. Exposures:The difference in the prevalence of uncontrolled chronic conditions between a person's origin zip code and destination zip code (excluding the individual mover's outcomes). Main Outcomes and Measures:Prevalence of uncontrolled blood pressure (systolic blood pressure level >140 mm Hg or diastolic blood pressure level >90 mm Hg), uncontrolled diabetes (hemoglobin A1c level >8%), obesity (body mass index >30), and depressive symptoms (2-item Patient Health Questionnaire score ≥2) per quarter-year during the 3 years before and the 3 years after individuals moved. Results:The study population included 5 342 207 individuals (mean age, 57.6 [SD, 17.4] years, 93.9% men, 72.5% White individuals, and 12.7% Black individuals), of whom 1 095 608 moved exactly once and 4 246 599 never moved during the study period. Among the movers, the change after moving in the prevalence of uncontrolled blood pressure was 27.5% (95% CI, 23.8%-31.3%) of the between-area difference in the prevalence of uncontrolled blood pressure. Similarly, the change after moving in the prevalence of uncontrolled diabetes was 5.0% (95% CI, 2.7%-7.2%) of the between-area difference in the prevalence of uncontrolled diabetes; the change after moving in the prevalence of obesity was 3.1% (95% CI, 2.0%-4.2%) of the between-area difference in the prevalence of obesity; and the change after moving in the prevalence of depressive symptoms was 15.2% (95% CI, 13.1%-17.2%) of the between-area difference in the prevalence of depressive symptoms. Conclusions and Relevance:In this retrospective cohort study of individuals receiving care at Veterans Health Administration facilities, geographic differences in prevalence were associated with a substantial percentage of the change in individuals' likelihood of poor blood pressure control or depressive symptoms, and a smaller percentage of the change in individuals' likelihood of poor diabetes control and obesity. Further research is needed to understand the source of these associations with a person's place of residence.
PMID: 33048153
ISSN: 1538-3598
CID: 4650672