
Diabetes (DM) is the fourth
leading cause of death in AA. About 2.3 million (approximately 10.8 per cent) of
African Americans in the United States have this disease, according to the
American Diabetes Association. This may be an underestimation; it is believed
that half of those who meet diagnostic criteria for DM are undiagnosed. Although
the age-adjusted death rates in 1995 were 117 percent higher for black men and
167 per cent higher for black women than for their respective white
counterparts, the prevalence of cardiovascular disease in blacks with DM appears
to be lower than in whites. Overall, however, when one considers Type II or
maturity-onset (non-insulin-dependent) DM, the prevalence in the 45-64 year age
group is 51 per cent higher for blacks than for whites.
In addition, African American
diabetics are characterized by the following features:

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