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Home NEWS Science News Cancer

Women with Diabetes Face Lower Rates of Preventive Care and Screening Services

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
April 3, 2026
in Cancer
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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A groundbreaking literature review led by researchers at UCLA has unveiled a concerning disparity in preventive healthcare delivery to women of reproductive age living with Diabetes Mellitus (DM). Despite their increased vulnerability to pregnancy complications and other preventable health issues, these women receive lower rates of essential preventive services compared to their non-diabetic counterparts. The study, slated for publication in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, meticulously analyzed 44 international studies focusing on women aged 15 to 49 with type 1 or type 2 diabetes, excluding gestational diabetes and diabetes insipidus.

The research underscores the critical gap in physician practice, where preventive measures such as conception counseling and cancer screenings are markedly underutilized in diabetic women. This discrepancy raises significant concerns about the holistic management of diabetes, especially considering the increased health risks these women face. Primary care providers, often constrained by office visit limitations, appear to prioritize chronic disease management over routine well-woman care, inadvertently sidelining vital preventive interventions.

Among the four categories of preventive services investigated—contraceptive counseling and use, breast and cervical cancer screenings, pre-conception counseling, and sexually transmitted infection screenings—the review disclosed stark contrasts in utilization rates. For instance, contraceptive service usage among women with diabetes stood at 48%, notably lower compared to 62% in non-diabetic women. Similarly, cervical cancer screenings ranged from 38% to 79% for diabetic women, lagging behind the 46% to 86% range observed in women without diabetes.

Breast cancer screening rates followed a comparable pattern with diabetic women receiving screenings between 38% and 69%, whereas rates for non-diabetic women ranged from 54% to 82%. More alarming was the rate of pre-conception counseling, critical for managing pregnancy risks in diabetic women planning to conceive, which remained dismally low at just over 1%, contrasted with 46% engagement in the non-diabetic population. This gap points to a systemic oversight that could have profound implications for maternal and fetal health outcomes.

Notably absent from the literature were studies assessing screenings for sexually transmitted infections among women with diabetes, a void identified by the researchers as a significant oversight and an area ripe for future inquiry. This omission further highlights the need for comprehensive preventive care strategies tailored to the diabetic female population.

The study advocates for enhanced models of coordinated care, particularly the co-management approach involving endocrinologists, primary care physicians, and other specialists. This multidisciplinary cooperation, as recommended by the American Diabetes Association, shows promise in elevating the receipt of preventive services. Such models could alleviate the burden on primary care providers, allowing them to address preventive health without compromising chronic disease management.

Clinical insights from co-author Dr. Lisa Kransdorf emphasize the practical challenges faced by primary care providers in balancing the demands of disease management with preventive care within limited consultation durations. However, when specialists and clinical pharmacists actively participate in diabetes management, primary care physicians can dedicate more attention to bridging preventive care gaps, potentially transforming patient outcomes.

The limitations of the studies reviewed highlight the urgency for expansive, multi-site research employing objective data collection methods beyond patient recall. Many studies suffered from small sample sizes and narrow settings, limiting generalizability and underscoring the critical necessity for robust evidence to guide healthcare policy and practice.

Future research trajectories proposed include leveraging electronic health records to systematically increase preventive service delivery, optimizing communication pathways between healthcare teams, and rigorously evaluating co-management approaches. Enhanced data integration could facilitate timely reminders and follow-ups, promoting adherence to preventive care guidelines.

This comprehensive review not only elucidates an overlooked aspect of diabetes management in women of reproductive age but also calls for a paradigm shift towards integrative, patient-centered care models. By embracing coordinated healthcare delivery and prioritizing preventive services, the medical community can markedly improve health outcomes for this vulnerable population.

The study, co-authored by Dr. Madeline Treasure, Dr. Pourandokht Nourbakhsh, Kate Diaz Roldan, Antonia Osuna-Garcia, and Sara Esteves, alongside Dr. Kransdorf and senior author Lauren Wisk, sets a precedent for re-evaluating clinical priorities. Their work paves the way for impactful changes in how preventive health services are integrated into the management plans for women living with diabetes.

As the incidence of diabetes continues to rise globally, particularly among women of reproductive age, these findings catalyze a call to action. Healthcare systems must evolve to inclusively address both chronic disease and preventive health, ensuring no woman with diabetes is left behind in receiving the care essential for her overall wellbeing and reproductive health.

Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Preventive Health Services in Reproductive-Aged Women with Diabetes Mellitus: A Scoping Review
News Publication Date: 3-Apr-2026
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11606-026-10253-5
Keywords: Diabetes, Preventive medicine, Pregnancy complications, Cancer screening, Birth control, Health counseling, Breast cancer, Cervical cancer

Tags: cancer screening rates in diabetic womencervical and breast cancer screening diabetescontraceptive counseling in diabetic womendiabetes and pregnancy complicationsdiabetes and reproductive health disparitieshealthcare gaps in diabetic womenpre-conception counseling for diabetespreventive health services utilization diabetesprimary care challenges diabetes managementsexually transmitted infection screening diabetestype 1 and type 2 diabetes screeningwomen with diabetes preventive care

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