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The association between antidepressant ues and hemoglobin A1C in older adults / Kammer, Jamie in Geriatric Nursing, Vol.38 N0.2 (Mar-Apr) 2017 ([06/29/2017])
[article]
Title : The association between antidepressant ues and hemoglobin A1C in older adults Material Type: printed text Authors: Kammer, Jamie, Author ; Hosler, Akiko S, Author ; Leckman,-Westin, Emily, Author Publication Date: 2017 Article on page: p.141-145 Languages : English (eng) Original Language : English (eng)
in Geriatric Nursing > Vol.38 N0.2 (Mar-Apr) 2017 [06/29/2017] . - p.141-145Keywords: Diabets.Antidepression.Hemoglobin AC.Older adults. Abstract: Depression is known to increase diabetes risk and worsen glycemic control in older adults, who already expericnce high rates of diabetes. The independent impact of antidepressants to glucose cintrol is less clear. Data was drawn from the Health and Retirement Study a large nationally-representative longitudinal study of retried individuals. Crude and adjusted linear models startified by diabetes status were used to examine the cross sectional association between antidepressant use categorized by subclass and continuous A hemoglobin A1C. The sanple include 1153 individuals, most over the age of 70. Antide pressants use was not associated with hemoglobin A1C with hemoglibin in any model whether stratified or in the total combined sample.Antidepression as a class were also not associatedd with hemoglobin A1C. These finding add to the literature suggesting that antidepressant sre not association with diabetes risk or glycemic control. Prospective studies with larger asmple zizes are needed to confirm this finding. Link for e-copy: http://www.gnjournal.com/ Record link: http://libsearch.siu.ac.th/siu/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=27007 [article] The association between antidepressant ues and hemoglobin A1C in older adults [printed text] / Kammer, Jamie, Author ; Hosler, Akiko S, Author ; Leckman,-Westin, Emily, Author . - 2017 . - p.141-145.
Languages : English (eng) Original Language : English (eng)
in Geriatric Nursing > Vol.38 N0.2 (Mar-Apr) 2017 [06/29/2017] . - p.141-145Keywords: Diabets.Antidepression.Hemoglobin AC.Older adults. Abstract: Depression is known to increase diabetes risk and worsen glycemic control in older adults, who already expericnce high rates of diabetes. The independent impact of antidepressants to glucose cintrol is less clear. Data was drawn from the Health and Retirement Study a large nationally-representative longitudinal study of retried individuals. Crude and adjusted linear models startified by diabetes status were used to examine the cross sectional association between antidepressant use categorized by subclass and continuous A hemoglobin A1C. The sanple include 1153 individuals, most over the age of 70. Antide pressants use was not associated with hemoglobin A1C with hemoglibin in any model whether stratified or in the total combined sample.Antidepression as a class were also not associatedd with hemoglobin A1C. These finding add to the literature suggesting that antidepressant sre not association with diabetes risk or glycemic control. Prospective studies with larger asmple zizes are needed to confirm this finding. Link for e-copy: http://www.gnjournal.com/ Record link: http://libsearch.siu.ac.th/siu/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=27007