Kentucky Health News
The number of people living with diabetes in Kentucky has increased 28 percent since 2011, the fifth largest increase among the states, according to an analysis of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data.
The report by Quote Wizard is based on the CDC’s Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, which askes adults if they have ever been told by a doctor that they have diabetes. In 2011, 10.8% of Kentucky respondents answered yes; in 2021, that number increased to 13.8%, an increase of 28%.
The numbers are likely much larger. According to the American Diabetes Association, 101,000 people in Kentucky have diabetes, but don’t know it, and 1.2 million Kentuckians have prediabetes. “Every year an estimated 31,090 people in Kentucky are diagnosed with diabetes,” says the association.
Why does it matter? Diabetes is the nation’s No. 7 cause of death and the No. 1 cause of kidney failure, lower-limb amputations and adult blindness, according to the CDC. The report also looked at the cost of diabetes in each state, including the average cost of insulin per year and the average diabetic’s healthcare costs in each state.
“From 2012 to 2017, the direct medical cost for diabetes went from $245 billion to $327 billion a year. On average, diabetics spend more than $6,700 a year on medical care — twice as much as non-diabetics,” says the report. “The price of insulin is also a major factor in the cost of diabetes. Insulin prices are up 600% in the last 20 years.”
The American Diabetes Association reports that diabetes costs among Kentuckians who have been diagnosed with the disease costs an estimated $5.2 billion a year.