Last data update: May 13, 2024. (Total: 46773 publications since 2009)
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Query Trace: Moore BA[original query] |
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The importance of natural experiments in diabetes prevention and control and the need for better health policy research
Gregg EW , Ali MK , Moore BA , Pavkov M , Devlin HM , Garfield S , Mangione CM . Prev Chronic Dis 2013 10 E14 Diabetes has steadily increased in prevalence, becoming one of the nation’s most challenging public health threats (1). Prevalence among adults is now more than 10%, and diabetes is the leading cause of nontraumatic lower-extremity amputation, end-stage kidney disease, and blindness; it more than doubles the risk of heart disease, stroke, and disability (1,2). Strong clinical trial evidence indicates that much of the illness caused by diabetes is preventable, further positioning diabetes as a public health priority (3,4) and stimulating a national emphasis on the quality of diabetes care and self-management (5–7). Although many such efforts have been successful, leading to better care, risk factor control, and reduced risk of complications, new challenges have arisen. The increases in obesity and in diabetes incidence demand that health systems and communities apply primary prevention strategies at the population level while simultaneously tackling the pervasive geographic and socioeconomic disparities in diabetes prevalence, care, and complications that remain (8,9). | Compared to the long list of clinical best practices to prevent diabetes complications, the evidence base is thin for population- and policy-level approaches to improve health behaviors, access to and delivery of care and preventive services, and the healthful attributes of communities. This imbalance of evidence calls for a new platform of public health research for diabetes. We contend that the imbalance can be corrected by a greater emphasis on natural experiments: rigorously designed quasi-experimental studies to investigate the health effects of naturally occurring population- and policy-level approaches emanating from health systems, communities, business organizations, and governments. |
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