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Due to its severe complications, diabetes can be associated with impairment and limitations of the quality of life and subsequently a loss in symptom-free life years (Zhang et al. 2020). The number of years lived with disability (YLD) is an indicator of the morbidity-related contribution to the overall burden of disease of diabetes. YLD is therefore an important indicator for the continuous monitoring of the cause-specific burden of disease.
Indikatoren_ScreenreaderHinweis_Datentabelle
Indikatoren_ScreenreaderHinweis_Datentabelle
Indikatoren_ScreenreaderHinweis_Datentabelle
Indikatoren_ScreenreaderHinweis_Datentabelle
In total, 526,823 years lived with disability (YLD) were related to diabetes in 2017. In relative terms, this equals 637.4 YLD per 100,000 persons, whereas the burden of disease in women is somewhat lower than in men (women: 616.9 YLD; men: 658.4 YLD). With increasing age, it becomes apparent that more and more years of life are lost due to health disabilities. Approximately 96.4% of this burden of disease is related to type 2 diabetes (type 2: 614.4 YLD; type 1: 23.0 YLD per 100,000 persons). Moreover, differences between the old and new federal states in Germany are evident: Whereas the lowest number of years lived with disability due to diabetes is lost in Hamburg (480.0 YLD), the burden in Saxony-Anhalt is nearly twice as high (945.1 YLD).
The morbidity-related burden of disease shows a correlation with age: Both the prevalence and the complications associated with diabetes are increasing with age which leads to higher years lived with disability. The contribution of type 2 diabetes, which is associated with a multitude of behavioural risk factors (Stanaway et al. 2018), to the overall burden of disease is much higher. The prevention of new cases as well as complications should therefore be central objectives.