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Diabetes-related death rates declined among older U.S. adults from 2004 to 2017

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Diabetes-related death rates declined among older U.S. adults from 2004 to 2017
Photo by Nisuda Nirmantha / Unsplash

A national report examined trends in diabetes-related deaths among U.S. adults aged 65 and older. It used data from the National Vital Statistics System to track age-adjusted death rates where diabetes was listed as either the main cause or a contributing cause of death. The analysis covered the years 2004 through 2017.

The main finding was that these age-adjusted death rates decreased over the 14-year period. The report describes this trend but does not provide specific numbers on how much the rates fell or statistical measures of the change. No information on safety concerns or specific interventions was included, as this was a descriptive look at population-level data.

It is important to be careful with these results. This is an observational report of trends, which means it can show a pattern but cannot prove what caused the decline. We do not know if changes in medical care, lifestyle, or other factors led to the decrease. The report also did not include statistical testing or an effect size, so we cannot measure the strength or certainty of the trend.

Readers should view this as a descriptive snapshot of a national trend over time. It suggests a positive direction in diabetes-related mortality for older adults, but more detailed research is needed to understand the reasons behind it. This information is useful for public health awareness but does not provide guidance for individual medical decisions.

What this means for you:
A national report shows a decline in diabetes-related death rates for older adults, but the reasons are not yet clear.
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