Filtered By:
Condition: Diabetes
Countries: USA Health

This page shows you your search results in order of date. This is page number 8.

Order by Relevance | Date

Total 465 results found since Jan 2013.

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy research: an analysis of the 100 most-cited publications from 2011 to 2020
CONCLUSIONS: The annual number of HBO2 publications was stationary. The citation numbers showed a skewed distribution. The United States was the leading country in HBO2 research. Of 26 application fields, traumatic brain injury, stroke, and diabetic foot were the leading three fields.PMID:36446297 | DOI:10.22462/07.08.2022.11
Source: Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine - November 29, 2022 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Hsin-Tzu Yeh Ching-Hsing Lee Source Type: research

Comment on: Insurance-mandated weight management program completion before bariatric surgery provides no long-term clinical benefit
By 2030, 1 in 2 American adults is projected to have obesity and 1 in 4 clinically severe obesity. Obesity represents a serious public health issue because it is a major risk factor for many major, noncommunicable diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease, stroke, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and cancer, and independently predicts overall mortality. The burden of obesity on medical spending is also significant, with $1861 in excess annual medical costs per adult with obesity and $3097 per adult with severe obesity —accounting for $173 billion annually in the United States [1].
Source: Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases - November 15, 2022 Category: Surgery Authors: Hamlet Gasoyan, David B. Sarwer, Michael B. Rothberg Tags: Editorial comment Source Type: research

Precertification criteria for bariatric surgery should be based on evidence
By 2030, one in two American adults is projected to have obesity and one in four clinically severe obesity. Obesity represents a serious public health issue because it is a major risk factor for many major, non-communicable diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease, stroke, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and cancer, and independently predicts overall mortality. The burden of obesity on medical spending is also significant, with $1,861 excess annual medical costs per adult with obesity and $3,097 per adult with severe obesity – accounting for $173 billion annually in the United States.
Source: Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases - November 15, 2022 Category: Surgery Authors: Hamlet Gasoyan, David B. Sarwer, Michael B. Rothberg Source Type: research

What to Know About Diabetes and the Risk of Silent Heart Attacks
At first it seemed like a routine call—something the paramedics had dealt with countless times before. A man in his mid-50s was having a heart attack, and his physician had called for emergency support. But when the paramedics arrived, the physician pulled them aside and told them something peculiar: the man had no cardiovascular symptoms whatsoever. The man had come to his doctor’s office because he’d woken early the previous morning sweating and with a sharp pain in his left wrist. These symptoms had quickly subsided and he’d gone back to sleep. Later, after going about his day, he’d visited...
Source: TIME: Health - November 4, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Markham Heid Tags: Uncategorized healthscienceclimate heart health Source Type: news

Collaborative care as an effective intervention for primary care patients at risk for suicide - Little V, White C.
In the United States, suicide is the 10th leading cause of death with more than 47,000 deaths by suicide and an estimated 1.4 million attempts annually. Suicide is comparable to other leading causes of death, including diabetes, heart disease, and stroke (...
Source: SafetyLit - October 20, 2022 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Social Etiologies and Disparities Source Type: news

Impact of cardiovascular disease on health care economic burden and resource utilization: a retrospective cohort study in adults in the United States with type 2 diabetes with or without stroke, myocardial infarction, and peripheral arterial disease
Conclusion: Having stroke, MI, or PAD was associated with increases in HCRU and costs in patients with T2DM. Although PAD was associated with smaller per patient increases in total healthcare costs than patients with T2DM + stroke/MI, the higher frequency of incident PAD may make it more costly than MI or stroke in a large population of patients with T2DM.PMID:36134459 | DOI:10.1080/03007995.2022.2125259
Source: Current Medical Research and Opinion - September 22, 2022 Category: Research Authors: Aaron King Jigar Rajpura Yuanjie Liang Yurek Paprocki Chioma Uzoigwe Source Type: research

Pregnancy-related cardiovascular conditions and outcomes in a United States Medicaid population
Conclusion This US cohort of Medicaid-funded women have a high incidence of severe cardiovascular conditions during pregnancy. Cardiometabolic conditions of pregnancy conferred threefold higher odds of severe cardiovascular outcomes.
Source: Heart - September 12, 2022 Category: Cardiology Authors: Marschner, S., von Huben, A., Zaman, S., Reynolds, H. R., Lee, V., Choudhary, P., Mehta, L. S., Chow, C. K. Tags: Open access, Editor's choice Cardiac risk factors and prevention Source Type: research

Long-Term Evolocumab in Patients with Established Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease
CONCLUSIONS: Long-term LDL-C lowering with evolocumab was associated with persistently low rates of adverse events for over >8 years that did not exceed those observed in the original placebo arm during the parent study and led to further reductions in cardiovascular events compared with delayed treatment initiation.PMID:36031810 | DOI:10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.122.061620
Source: Circulation - August 29, 2022 Category: Cardiology Authors: Michelle L O'Donoghue Robert P Giugliano Stephen D Wiviott Dan Atar Anthony C Keech Julia F Kuder KyungAh Im Sabina A Murphy Jose H Flores-Arredondo J Antonio G Lopez Mary Elliott-Davey Bei Wang Maria Laura Monsalvo Siddique Abbasi Marc S Sabatine Source Type: research

The Prevalence of Multimorbidity among Foreign-born Adults in the United States
CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of multimorbidity among immigrants was lower than the prevalence in the overall US population of the same age, consistent with studies showing an immigrant health advantage.PMID:35909642 | PMC:PMC9311306 | DOI:10.18865/ed.32.3.213
Source: Ethnicity and Disease - August 1, 2022 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Authors: Rebecca E Jones Lubaba Tasnim Solveig A Cunningham Source Type: research