From: Diabetes management in Thailand: a literature review of the burden, costs, and outcomes
Estimate | Summary of the main features of the study | Reference |
---|---|---|
HbA1c levels <7% | Study year: March-October 2007 | [53] |
41.3% | Setting: 13 primary care units in urban areas | |
 | Sample and study design: 287 diabetic patients, 79 males, 208 females. Cross-sectional study, ADA criteria | |
HbA1c levels <7% | Study year: July 2007 | [72] |
29.7% | Setting: diabetes clinic in a community hospital | |
 | Sample and study design: 325 diabetic patients (who had diabetes for at least one year), 114 males, 221 females. Cross-sectional study. | |
30.2% of the participants achieved HbA1c levels of less than 7% | Study year: April-December 2003 | [71] |
Setting: 11 tertiary diabetes centres | ||
Sample and study design: 8,913 Type 2 diabetes patients aged 18 and older (3,012 males and 5,901 females). Cross-sectional study. Thailand diabetes registry project | ||
HbA1c levels < 7% | Study year: April-December 2003 | [67] |
DMT1: 17% | Setting: 11 tertiary diabetes centres | |
DMT2: 21.6% | Sample and study design: Children and adolescents diabetes, 58 Type 1 and 22 Type 2, Cross-sectional study. Thailand diabetes registry project | |
HbA1c levels 7-8% | Â | |
DMT1: 20% | Â | |
DMT2: 15.2% | Â | |
HbA1c levels 8-9% | Â | |
DMT1: 15% | Â | |
DMT2: 15.2% | Â | |
HbA1c levels >9% | Â | |
DMT1: 47.6% | Â | |
DMT2: 48.2% | Â | Â |