U.S. Food and Drug Administration

DIABETES FACTS


WOMEN AND DIABETES

What Is Diabetes?

Diabetes is a disease that affects the body's ability to produce or respond to insulin, a hormone that allows blood glucose (blood sugar) to enter the cells of the body and be used for energy. Diabetes falls into two main categories: type 1, which usually occurs during childhood or adolescence, and type 2, the most common form of the disease, which usually occurs after age 45, but is increasingly being diagnosed in children and adolescents.

How Does It Affect Women?

Approximately 9.1 million or 8.9% of all women in the United States have diabetes, however, about a third of them do not know it. The prevalence of diabetes is at least 2-4 times higher among African American, Hispanic/Latino, American Indian, and Asian/Pacific Islander women than among white women. Because of the increasing lifespan of women and the rapid growth of minority populations, the number of women in the United States at high risk for diabetes and its complications is increasing.

Diabetes is the fifth-deadliest disease in the United States, and it has no cure. Women with diabetes have an increased risk of vaginal infections and complications during pregnancy. For women who do not currently have diabetes, pregnancy brings the risk of gestational diabetes. Gestational diabetes develops in 2% to 5% of all pregnancies but disappears when a pregnancy is over. Women who have had gestational diabetes are at an increased risk for developing type 2 diabetes later in life.

Women and Diabetic Complications

Pregnancy and Diabetes

* Pregnancy demands more insulin in the body than normal because of the increased production of hormones that can lead to insulin resistance. For women with diabetes, excellent blood glucose control before conception and then throughout pregnancy is vital to the health of the baby and the mother.

* The rate of major congenital malformations in babies born to women with preexisting diabetes varies from 0 to 5 percent among women who receive preconception care to 10% among women who do not receive preconception care.

* Between 3 to 5 percent of pregnancies among women with diabetes result in death of the newborn within 28 days. This compares to a rate of 1.5% for women who do not have diabetes.

* Macrosomia, large birth weight, occurs 2 to 3 times more often in diabetic pregnancies as in the general population. Because of the increased risk of fetal macrosomia, women with diabetes are 3 to 4 times more likely to have a cesarean section.

* Women with diabetes are up to 5 times as likely to develop toxemia (a disorder of unknown cause usually marked by hypertension, protein in the urine, edema, headache, and visual disturbances) and hydramnios (excessive amounts of amniotic fluid) as women without diabetes.

* Approximately 2 to 5 percent of all non-diabetic pregnant women develop gestational diabetes, a form of diabetes that occurs only during pregnancy.

* Approximately 40 percent of women with gestational diabetes who are obese before pregnancy develop type 2 diabetes within 4 years. The chance of developing diabetes during this same period is lower if the women are less overweight.

Diabetes and Birth Control

What Is Needed?

For more information in English or Spanish, contact the American Diabetes Association
at 1-800-DIABETES (1-800-342-2383), or visit our Web site at www.diabetes.org.

3/02

American Diabetes Association


For more information:
1-800-DIABETES
(1-800-342-2383)
Member, Diabetes Take Time To Care button


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