Researchers are Trying to Find out Why Diabetes Patients are Hospitalized Frequently

Researchers at the Mayo Clinic have tried to figure out why patients with diabetes have higher rates of hospitalization and readmission than the rest of the population and what can be done to prevent it.  

They examined data from more than 340,000 patients over a nearly six-year period. The authors found that patients with diabetes are initially admitted to the hospital for pretty much the same wide range of reasons that everyone else is, but after the initial condition had been stabilized, almost 11 percent of diabetes patients would be back in the hospital within 30 days. Of those, about 3 percent were being treated for high or low blood sugar – regardless of the initial condition.

Younger patients, ages 18-44, were twice as likely to be readmitted for severe high or low blood sugar than older patients. And readmission for severe high or low blood sugar was a strong indicator for another episode of readmission.

Almost 15 percent of West Virginia adults have diabetes.

Researchers think the best way to prevent readmission in these high-risk cases is to invest in good outpatient care, support and education.

The study was published this month in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. 

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation, Charleston Area Medical Center and WVU Medicine.

Report: Charleston Adults Have Very High Rate of Diabetes

A new report says Charleston, West Virginia had the second highest rate of diabetes last year out of nearly 200 communities surveyed across the nation.A…

A new report says Charleston, West Virginia had the second highest rate of diabetes last year out of nearly 200 communities surveyed across the nation.

A Gallup-Healthways report released Wednesday says 17.6 percent of adults in Charleston in 2015 had diabetes. Of the 190 communities studied, only Mobile, Alabama had a marginally worse rate of 17.7 percent.

The report found the overall incidence of diabetes in U.S. adults has grown from 10.6 percent in 2008 to 11.5 percent.

The community rankings were based on telephone interviews with 246,620 adults from all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

Charleston Dr. Mary Ann Maurer tells the Charleston Gazette-Mail the prevalence of diabetes is largely due to a lack of exercise and poor eating habits.

Tipping The Scale Again, West Virginia Is The Most Obese State

According to the latest data, West Virginia's adult obesity rate is tied with Mississippi for the highest in the country at 35.1%. Colorado has the lowest…

According to the latest data, West Virginia’s adult obesity rate is tied with Mississippi for the highest in the country at 35.1%.  Colorado has the lowest rate at 21.3 percent.

The annual report is produced by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Trust for America’s Health.

In addition to being the most obese state, West Virginia is also the state with the highest percentage of people who do not exercise.

Among high schoolers,  West Virginia ranks sixth, with 13 percent of those students obese.

The study finds across the country, every state has an obesity rate above 20 percent.

Officials at the foundation say these obesity rates put Americans at risk for a range of health problems and add a major burden to national healthcare costs. The report warns if obesity rates are not brought down, this generation of children may be the first in U.S. history to live sicker and die younger than their parents.

Its data shows West Virginia also has the second highest diabetes rate in the country at 13 percent. 

Credit stateofobesity.org
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