Correction & Withdrawal Policies
Psychosocial Factors and the Risk of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in Women Population based Epidemiological Study
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.30564/jgm.v2i2.2304Abstract
Our aim was to study the effect of depression and social support on the risk of type 2 diabetes in female population aged 25-64 in Russia / Siberia. Under the screening surveys random representative samples of women aged 25-64 years were examined in 1994 and 2005. Depression assessment was performed using the MONICA- MOPSY test. Social support was measured using the Berkman-Sim test. From 1994 to 2018 in a cohort of women new-onset cases of diabetes mellitus were detected. The risk of T2DM in persons with depression was 1.844 (p<0.01). After adjusting for sociodemographic variables, the risk decreased by 6% but remained significantly significant (p <0.05). The impact of a low level of social relations showed a significant effect on the risk of diabetes mellitus, including the multivariate model adjusted for the social gradient (HR=1.833, p<0.05). The presence of psychosocial factors decreases the protective effect of education in diabetes incidence. The incidence of T2D was higher in the group of manual labor and in executives. Depression and low social support increase the risk of T2DM by 80%. The frequencies of T2DM are determined by the social gradient and are associated with the role conflict “family-work”.
Keywords:
Depression; Social support; Diabetes; Female population; RiskReferences
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Copyright © 2020 Valery Gafarov, Dmitriy Panov, Elena Gromova, Igor Gagulin, Almira Gafarova
This is an open access article under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) License.