Diabetes mellitus in privately insured autistic adults in the United States.

Daniel Gilmore, Brittany N Hand
Author Information
  1. Daniel Gilmore: The Ohio State University, USA. ORCID
  2. Brittany N Hand: The Ohio State University, USA. ORCID

Abstract

LAY ABSTRACT: Diabetes is a chronic health condition that is challenging to manage. Estimates of how common diabetes is among non-autistic adults are available, but improved estimates for autistic adults are needed. The purpose of this study was to obtain improved diabetes estimates for autistic adults. We analyzed a large private health insurance claims database to estimate how common diabetes was among autistic adults, and how likely autistic adults were to have diabetes compared to non-autistic adults at 5-year age intervals throughout adulthood (e.g. 18-22, 23-27). We found that diabetes was more common among autistic adults than non-autistic adults and that autistic adults were significantly more likely than non-autistic adults to have diabetes throughout most of adulthood. Our findings suggest that autistic adults may be more likely than non-autistic adults to experience diabetes in adulthood. The development of diabetes support services and programs that accommodate autistic adults' individual needs are important for future study to promote positive diabetes outcomes for autistic adults.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Humans
Adult
United States
Male
Female
Young Adult
Insurance, Health
Adolescent
Autistic Disorder
Diabetes Mellitus
Middle Aged

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0adultsdiabetesautisticnon-autisticcommonamonglikelyadulthoodDiabeteshealthimprovedestimatesstudythroughoutLAYABSTRACT:chronicconditionchallengingmanageEstimatesavailableneededpurposeobtainanalyzedlargeprivateinsuranceclaimsdatabaseestimatecompared5-yearageintervalseg18-2223-27foundsignificantlyfindingssuggestmayexperiencedevelopmentsupportservicesprogramsaccommodateadults'individualneedsimportantfuturepromotepositiveoutcomesmellitusprivatelyinsuredUnitedStatesautismmedicalco-morbidity

Similar Articles

Cited By