Australia Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle Study 2004-2005, Follow-up 1
General Info
Original or alternative title
AusDiab 2004-2005
Coverage type
Country
Time period covered
May, 2004 - November, 2005
Data type
Survey:
Exam - Health facility - Individual - Interview - Longitudinal - Nationally representative
Summary
"The Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle Study (AusDiab) is the largest Australian longitudinal population-based study examining the natural history of diabetes, pre-diabetes (in which glucose metabolism is impaired but not to the level to cause diabetes), heart disease and kidney disease. The 1999/2000 AusDiab study was the first National Diabetes prevalence study to be conducted in Australia, and included 11,247 adults from 42 different locations across Australia. The participants were followed up in 2004/2005 and again in 2011/12 to provide the first ever information about the incidence (or development) of diabetes and other non-communicable diseases in Australia over time." Source: Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute
Keywords
Alcohol use, Anthropometry, Antihypertensive drugs, Assets, Birth control pills, Birth place, Blood glucose, Blood pressure, Blood tests, Body mass index, Cholesterol, Cholesterol tests, Chronic kidney diseases, Contraceptives, Diabetes, Disability, Drug consumption, Echocardiograms, Education, Employment, Ethnicity, Eye examinations, FFQ, Family composition, Family size, Fatigue, Food industry, G6PD deficiency, Genetic risk factors, Glomerular filtration rate, Glucose tests, Health care use, Health insurance, Health literacy, Health status, Height, Hormone replacement therapy, Hospitals, Hours worked, Housing, Hypercholesterolemia, Hypertension, Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, Hypertensive treatment, Hypertriglyceridemia, Hysterectomy, Income, Insulin, International migration, Interventions, Languages, Lifestyle risk factors, Limited mobility, Macular degeneration, Marital status, Maternal age, Maternal morbidity, Medicines, Menopause, Mental health symptoms, Microalbuminuria screening, Obesity, Occupations, Pain, Parental survival, Physical activity, Pregnancy, Prices, Public social assistance, Pulse, Reproductive health, SF-36, Sense organ diseases, Tobacco smoking, Training programs, Unemployment, Urine tests, Weight
Citation
Contributors
Funders
Publisher
Publication year
2024
Suggested citation
Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute. Australia Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle Study 2004-2005, Follow-up 1. Melbourne, Australia: Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, 2024.