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Table 1 Percent of the adult population with diabetes having used healthcare services for a mood or anxiety disorder, by individual and neighbourhood-level characteristics

From: Neighbourhood characteristics related to mental health service use among adults with diabetes: a population-based cohort study in New Brunswick, Canada

Characteristic

(1) All adults with diabetes (N = 66,275 prevalent cases) (%)

(2) Newly diagnosed diabetes (N = 4410 incident cases) (%)

Sex

 Female

32.5

23.9

 Male

20.8

15.9

Age group

 19–34 years

37.9

28.6

 35–49 years

35.6

24.0

 50–64 years

29.4

19.0

 65–79 years

23.1

17.3

 80 years and over

17.6

15.4

Neighbourhood material deprivation

 Quintile 1—least deprivation

24.5

18.1

 Quintile 2

25.5

17.4

 Quintile 3

26.3

19.9

 Quintile 4

26.4

18.1

 Quintile 5—most deprivation

26.9

20.4

Neighbourhood residential instability

 Quintile 1—least instability

26.0

21.4

 Quintile 2

25.7

18.4

 Quintile 3

25.4

18.9

 Quintile 4

27.0

18.2

 Quintile 5—most instability

28.7

21.9

Neighbourhood ethnic concentration

 Quintile 1—least ethnic

25.3

18.8

 Quintile 2

26.8

21.4

 Quintile 3

27.4

16.2

 Quintile 4

26.8

20.4

 Quintile 5—most ethnic

30.0

22.2

Neighbourhood population dependency

 Quintile 1—least dependency

26.9

17.9

 Quintile 2

27.9

20.4

 Quintile 3

25.9

18.7

 Quintile 4

26.1

17.6

 Quintile 5—most dependency

26.2

21.4

Neighbourhood active living friendliness

 Low

26.0

18.9

 Medium

27.0

19.2

 High

29.6

23.1

Total

26.3

19.3

  1. Individual- and area-based characteristics are those at baseline. Data refer to any use of medical or hospital services for mood and anxiety disorders over a 6-year follow-up period
  2. Source: Linked provincial administrative health and geospatial datasets