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The social determinants of diabetes and cardiovascular disease risk factors in Barbados: findings from the health of the nation study
In. Caribbean Public Health Agency. Caribbean Public Health Agency: 60th Annual Scientific Meeting. Kingston, The University of the West Indies. Faculty of Medical Sciences, 2015. p.[1-75]. (West Indian Medical Journal Supplement).
Monografía en Inglés | MedCarib | ID: med-17913
Biblioteca responsable: TT2.1
ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE:

To describe the distribution of diabetes, hypertension and related behavioural and biological risk factors in adults in Barbados by sex, education and occupation. DESIGN AND

METHODS:

Multistage probability sampling was used to select a representative sample of the adult population (> 25 years). Participants were interviewed using standard questionnaires, underwent anthropometric and blood pressure measurements, and provided fasting blood for glucose and cholesterol measurements. Standard WHO Definitions were used. Data were weighted for sampling and non-response and age-adjusted for group comparisons.

RESULTS:

Study participation rate was 55%, with 764 women, 470 men. Prevalence of obesity was 33.8%, hypertension 40.6%, and diabetes 17.9%. Compared with women, men were less likely to be obese (prevalence ratio 0.53; 95%CI 0.42–0.67), diabetic (0.77; 0.61–0.98), or physically inactive (0.47; 0.39–0.57), but more likely to smoke tobacco (4.08; 2.48–6.69) and binge drink alcohol (4.53; 2.70–7.58). In women, higher educational level was significantly related to higher fruit and vegetable intake, more physical activity, less diabetes and less hypercholesterolaemia (p values 0.01 – 0.04). In men, higher education was significantly related only to less smoking. Differences by occupational category were limited to smoking in men and hypercholesterolaemia in women.

CONCLUSIONS:

In this population, unlike in most high-income countries, sex appears to be a much stronger determinant of behavioural risk factors, and consequent obesity and diabetes, than education or occupation. These findings have major implications for meeting the commitments made in the 2011 Rio Political Declaration, to reduce health inequities.
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Colección: Bases de datos internacionales Contexto en salud: ODS3 - Salud y Bienestar Problema de salud: Meta 3.8: Alcanzar cobertura universal de salud Base de datos: MedCarib Asunto principal: Barbados / Enfermedades Cardiovasculares / Factores de Riesgo / Diabetes Mellitus / Hipertensión Tipo de estudio: Estudio diagnóstico / Estudio de etiología / Factores de riesgo Aspecto: Determinantes sociales de la salud País/Región como asunto: Barbados / Caribe Inglés Idioma: Inglés Revista: West Indian Medical Journal Supplement Año: 2015 Tipo del documento: Monografía
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Colección: Bases de datos internacionales Contexto en salud: ODS3 - Salud y Bienestar Problema de salud: Meta 3.8: Alcanzar cobertura universal de salud Base de datos: MedCarib Asunto principal: Barbados / Enfermedades Cardiovasculares / Factores de Riesgo / Diabetes Mellitus / Hipertensión Tipo de estudio: Estudio diagnóstico / Estudio de etiología / Factores de riesgo Aspecto: Determinantes sociales de la salud País/Región como asunto: Barbados / Caribe Inglés Idioma: Inglés Revista: West Indian Medical Journal Supplement Año: 2015 Tipo del documento: Monografía
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