Medicare Blog

how many people on medicare have diabetes 2017

by Gerry Romaguera Published 2 years ago Updated 1 year ago
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Full Answer

Is diabetes more common among Medicare-only or Medicare beneficiaries?

Beneficiaries eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid, who are generally of lower socio-economic status than Medicare-only beneficiaries, had a higher prevalence of diabetes (30.1 percent) compared to Medicare-only beneficiaries (20.2 percent).

What is the average age of diagnosis for diabetes in Medicare?

Community-dwelling Medicare beneficiaries ages 65 and older in 2012, as a group, were first diagnosed with diabetes at age 58.8, on average (Figure 2). Black and Hispanic beneficiaries were first diagnosed at younger ages (56.9 years, on average) compared to White beneficiaries (59.5 years, on average). Figure 3.

Can Medicare claims data be used to identify diabetic patients?

Medicare administrative data sets, which contain claims for millions of older adults, afford an opportunity to explore both trends over time and heterogeneity within an older population. Previous studies have shown that claims data can be used to identify persons with diagnosed diabetes (2).

How many people in the US have diabetes?

Fast Facts on Diabetes 30.3 million people have diabetes (9.4% of the U.S. population) Diagnosed 23.1 million people Undiagnosed 7.2 million (23.8% of people with diabetes are undiagnosed) National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion Division of Diabetes Translation CS279910-A 2 | National Diabetes Statistics Report, 2017

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What percentage of Medicare population has diabetes?

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' (CMS) Chronic Conditions Data Warehouse indicates that 27.5% of Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) beneficiaries had a diagnosis of diabetes in 2019.

How many patients on Medicare have diabetes?

Diabetes affects roughly one in five Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 years and over.

How many Medicare recipients use insulin?

About one-third of Medicare beneficiaries had diabetes in 2016, up from 18% in 2000. More than 3 million were taking insulin at a cost of $13.3 billion to Medicare and beneficiaries.

What race has the highest rate of Type 2 diabetes?

Pacific Islanders and American Indians have the highest rates of diabetes among the 5 racial groups counted in the U.S. Census. They're more than twice as likely to have the condition as whites, who have about an 8% chance of having it as adults.

How many seniors on Medicare have diabetes?

One in every three Medicare beneficiaries has diabetes, and over 3.3 million Medicare beneficiaries use one or more of the common forms of insulin.

Does Medicare pay for insulin?

If you need to use an insulin pump, your doctor will prescribe it for you. Note: In Original Medicare, you pay 20% of the Medicare-approved amount after the yearly Part B deductible. Medicare will pay 80% of the cost of the insulin and the insulin pump.

How much does diabetes cost the healthcare system?

Diabetes is the most expensive chronic condition in our nation. $1 out of every $4 in US health care costs is spent on caring for people with diabetes. $237 billion‡(c) is spent each year on direct medical costs and another $90 billion‡(c) on reduced productivity.

Is insulin subject to the donut hole?

Many diabetes patients requiring insulin will end up in the Medicare coverage gap known as the “donut hole,” where they're responsible for a greater share of the drugs' costs. When in the donut hole, your client's out-of-pocket costs at the pharmacy spike dramatically.

What tier level is insulin?

A large number of plans placed insulin products on Tier 3, the preferred drug tier, with a $47 copayment per prescription during the initial coverage phase; more plans used this combination of tier placement and cost-sharing requirement for coverage of insulin than any other combination in 2019 (Table 3, Table 4).

Which country has lowest diabetes rates?

The countries with the lowest estimated prevalence in the 38 nation league were (lowest first), Lithuania, Estonia, and Ireland (all around 4%), followed by Sweden, Luxembourg, the U.K., and Australia (all around 5%). Canada, the host nation for the World Diabetes Congress, has the 12th highest prevalence, at 7%.

Does Rice cause diabetes?

The researchers found that people who ate the most rice—three to four servings a day—were 1.5 times more likely to have diabetes than people who ate the least amount of rice. In addition, for every additional large bowl of white rice a person ate each day, the risk rose 10 percent.

How common is diabetes in white people?

Findings In this cross-sectional study that included 7575 adults, the age- and sex-adjusted diabetes prevalence was 12.1% for non-Hispanic white, 20.4% for non-Hispanic black, 22.1% for Hispanic, and 19.1% for non-Hispanic Asian groups.

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