Counting Diabetes in the Next Millennium: Application of capture-recapture technology
- Ronald E LaPorte, PHD,
- Daniel McCarty, MS,
- Graziella Bruno, MD,
- Naoko Tajima, MD and
- Shigeaki Baba, MD
- Department of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Istituto Di Medicina Interna, Universita Ditorino Torino, Italy Jikei University Tokyo Hyogo Institute for Research in Adult Diseases Kobe, Japan
- Address Correspondence and Reprint Requests to Ronald E. Laporte, PHD, Department of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261.
Abstract
Monitoring diabetes is critical for our understanding of the etiology and natural history of disease and for public health actions. However, traditional methods for monitoring are either too expensive (e.g., IDDM registries, NIDDM-OGTT prevalence surveys) or too inaccurate (routinely collected data or passive surveillance) for broad accurate, national programs for monitoring the incidence and prevalence of disease. We suggest that one technology called capture-recapture would considerably increase our ability to “count” diabetes, both nationally and globally. Implementation of this approach could lead to accurate inter- and intracountry data on rates of disease. Moreover, such tracking of diabetes could serve as the model for the monitoring of all disease in the 21st century and beyond.
- Received July 24, 1992.
- Revision received October 26, 1992.
- Accepted October 26, 1992.
- Copyright © 1993 by the American Diabetes Association











