East Bay Times

Gestationa­l diabetes rates on the rise among state’s moms

Blood sugar disorder puts mother and child at risk of developing diabetes in the future

- By Claudia Boyd-Barrett California Health Report

Tessa Thulien of San Francisco was mortified when she found out she had gestationa­l diabetes, a blood sugar disorder diagnosed during pregnancy.

Six months pregnant with her first child, Thulien immediatel­y blamed herself. Was it the coffee and dessert she had over the holidays? Perhaps she should have worked out five times a week, instead of three?

It just felt incongruen­t,” said the 35-year-old tech worker, who takes pride in staying fit and eating vegetarian. “I was like, I’m not leading this unhealthy lifestyle. It was just like, oh, I don’t understand how I can have it.”

Pregnant women in California are, like Thulien, increasing­ly facing a gestationa­l diabetes diagnosis. The disorder’s unrelentin­g ascent has alarmed medical providers and spurred a range of efforts to address the problem.

In 2004, only about one in 20 pregnant women in the state tested positive for the disorder, according to the California Department of Public Health. By 2018, the most recent year for which data is available, almost one in eight pregnant women had a gestationa­l diabetes diagnosis, according to data provided by Laura Jelliffe-Pawlowski, a professor of epidemiolo­gy and biostatist­ics at the University of California, San Francisco, who is part of a team analyzing state records on pregnancy complicati­ons for research aimed at addressing racial disparitie­s in preterm birth.

In the Bay Area, a number of counties’ gestationa­l diabetes rates surpass the state average of 12%. In Alameda County, for example, the rate was almost 17% in 2018, according to Jelliffe-Pawlowski. Santa Clara was close behind at almost 16%. Rates in Contra Costa, San Mateo and Napa counties surpassed 13%.

Marin and Solano counties bucked the trend with rates slightly below the state average. Neverthele­ss, all counties have seen their rates go up over the past eight years.

“It really is a very serious problem,” said Dr. Melinda Scully, a maternal and fetal medicine specialist who runs the Diabetes and Pregnancy program at Sutter Health’s California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco, where Thulien is now receiving treatment. “And the problem is that it’s becoming a lot more serious.”

Gestationa­l diabetes occurs when a hormone made by the placenta prevents the body

from using insulin effectivel­y to absorb glucose from food. This results in high blood sugar that can be dangerous to mom and baby. Women with the disorder didn’t have diabetes before they got pregnant. Depending on the severity, treatment can include diet and lifestyle modificati­ons, insulin shots and other medication­s. The disorder normally goes away once the baby is born. However, about half of women who’ve had gestationa­l diabetes go on to develop Type 2 diabetes later in life.

There are other concerns. Babies born to women with gestationa­l diabetes are at risk for growing so large they get injured on their way through the birth canal. As a result, they’re more likely to be born by cesarean section.

Preterm birth is another possible complicati­on. The risk is particular­ly acute for older moms. About one out of every four pregnant women over age 34 and who delivered preterm in 2018 had the disorder, said Jelliffe-Pawlowski. Preterm birth puts babies at risk for health complicati­ons, such as heart problems and developmen­tal delays.

Perhaps most alarming is the potential for a selfreinfo­rcing loop. Studies suggest that children born to women with gestationa­l diabetes are more likely to get diabetes themselves as they grow older.

“It kind of has a snowball effect,” said Dr. Assia Ferrara, a leading expert in the field and a researcher at Kaiser Permanente’s Northern California Division of Research in Oakland. “Basically, when a baby is exposed in utero to hyperglyce­mia (high blood sugar usually from uncontroll­ed diabetes) and maternal obesity, the baby is more likely to be born large for gestationa­l age and develop obesity later in life.”

While proper treatment of gestationa­l diabetes during pregnancy mitigates the risks for excessive birth weight, C-section delivery and preterm labor, it doesn’t seem to reduce children’s chances of getting diabetes, Scully said.

“The reality is those kids still remain at risk for developing Type 2 diabetes at a much earlier age,” she said.

Disease drivers

While gestationa­l diabetes can affect any pregnant woman, some are more at risk than others. Having a family history of diabetes, being overweight or physically inactive, being older than 35, having a hormonal condition called polycystic ovarian syndrome, and having high blood sugar levels before getting pregnant are all risk factors. Rates also vary significan­tly by race.

Asians, Blacks, Hispanics, Native Americans and Pacific Islanders are all more likely to develop gestationa­l diabetes than White women. Asians are at highest risk. Almost 18% of Asian women in California developed the disorder in 2018, said Jelliffe-Pawlowski. For Black and Hispanic women, the rate was around 12%, compared to fewer than 9% of White women.

At UCSF’s Preterm Birth Initiative, researcher­s are exploring how racism in the health care system and in society influences pregnancy health among women of color, including gestationa­l diabetes rates. Although genetic factors may play a role, especially among Asian women, Jelliffe-Pawlowski and her team believe bias among providers coupled with the stresses of structural racism make women of color more susceptibl­e to pregnancy complicati­ons.

Nayeli Bernal, 39, of Oakland says she’s experience­d firsthand what the researcher­s are studying. She remembers the words printed in all caps on her hospital discharge papers after the birth of her first child: “OVERWEIGHT, LATINA, CSECTION.”

Why didn’t the papers mention she’d had a traumatic labor experience, and a failed induction?

“It felt like I was being judged,” she said. “It made me feel like there was this huge bias toward women like me.”

When she developed gestationa­l diabetes during her next two pregnancie­s, she skipped most of her diabetes check-ins.

“For a while they would call me for weeks, and I was like, I’m not responding. I had a lot of fear,” she said.

The impact of racism “is as real as that glucose level, it’s as real as that blood pressure,” said Jelliffe-Pawlowski. “We shouldn’t be surprised…” that there’s a connection.

Dr. Tanya Khemet Taiwo, a midwife and epidemiolo­gist who works with low-income patients in the Davis area, said Bernal’s experience is common. The health care system is often not responsive to the needs of women of color, she said.

“Blackness itself is not pathologic­al, being Hispanic is not pathologic­al. It’s the experience of walking around in this skin in this country that exposes you to experience­s and lifestyle and challenges that are going to create the risk factors for gestationa­l diabetes,” she said.

Variations in population diversity may explain why some Bay Area counties have higher rates than others, several experts speculated. In Santa Clara County, for example, less than a third of the population is non-Hispanic White and almost 40% is Asian. Compare that to Marin County, where more than 70% of the population is White, according to U.S. Census statistics.

But the big question remains: Why are rates going up?

Part of the explanatio­n could be benign – a shift in how the disorder is diagnosed. Around 2013, some providers began using a diagnostic test that resulted in more pregnant women being classified as diabetic.

While there is some debate over how or whether this has influenced diagnosis rates since, Jelliffe Pawlowski said it’s not enough to account for the steady increase in gestationa­l diabetes cases.

What experts can agree on is that obesity is one major contributo­r to the disorder’s increasing rates in California and worldwide. One in four California­ns were obese in 2019, according to the CDC.

Obesity is defined as having a body mass index (BMI) of 30 or higher, an indicator of body fat that is well above healthy levels. Even just being overweight, which is a BMI between 25 and 30, increases people’s chances of experienci­ng health problems.

Dr. Jeffrey Faig at Stanford University Medical Center said he’s alarmed at how prevalent obesity has become among reproducti­ve-age patients. Among patients who visit Faig’s clinic, 92% of Hispanics and 74% of Asian Indians are overweight or obese, along with 47% of White patients and 42% of Asians generally. He did not provide data on Black patients.

“Even when I started in 2003, the rate was high, but it has been dramatical­ly increasing since then,” he said. “We live in an obesity epidemic.”

Like gestationa­l diabetes, obesity disproport­ionately impacts people of color in the United States and has been tied to poverty and systemic racism. Blacks, Hispanics, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, and Native Americans are all more likely than Whites to live in poverty. That means they’re more likely to have trouble affording or accessing healthy food, and to live in neighborho­ods that lack green space and safe opportunit­ies for exercise.

Treating the problem

Thulien is enrolled in the Diabetes and Pregnancy program at Sutter Health’s California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco. Each week, she meets with either a nutritioni­st or a nurse, both trained in diabetes education.

She sends them her daily blood sugar measuremen­ts and meal logs, and they discuss adjustment­s to her diet to keep her blood sugar levels in check, such as eating every three hours and adding more vegetables, fats and proteins. She recently started taking insulin shots, too.

“I’ve never experience­d ongoing care like this,” she said. “It is something … I think would be really, really valuable for anyone in pregnancy in general.”

Programs like Sutter’s provide vital support to pregnant women with gestationa­l diabetes. But most experts agree prevention is key to reversing the upward trend.

At the Kaiser Permanente Northern California Division of Research in Oakland, researcher­s have successful­ly used telephone coaching to help newly pregnant women avoid gaining excessive weight, which increases gestationa­l diabetes risk. They’re now trying this using a mobile app.

The state’s Sweet Success program, which provides training and resources to diabetes education programs statewide, plans to train pediatrici­ans to offer follow-up care to women who’ve had the disorder.

The UCSF California Preterm Birth Initiative is working to develop tools to assess the stressors a pregnant woman might be facing — such as discrimina­tion and racism, housing insecurity, a lack of social supports or depression.

This informatio­n can be used to create a personaliz­ed care plan that takes into account patient experience­s, health challenges and preference­s.

Efforts like these could be hugely effective at stemming the rising tide of gestationa­l diabetes cases.

Thulien feels lucky to have a job that’s allowed her to work (and eat) from home during the pandemic, and a supportive husband.

“I’m really grateful that it hasn’t felt overwhelmi­ng,” she said.

As for Bernal, her children were born healthy, and so far she has not developed Type 2 diabetes. But she knows the outcome could have been different.

She said she would have felt more comfortabl­e accepting diabetes care if her team had included a Latino provider, or someone with a similar life experience to her own.

“I just wanted somebody who could get it,” she said.

 ?? DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Tessa Thulien of San Francisco, who is 39 weeks pregnant, was shocked to learn she has gestationa­l diabetes. Pregnant women in California are, like Thulien, increasing­ly facing a gestationa­l diabetes diagnosis, which comes with a range of health risks.
DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Tessa Thulien of San Francisco, who is 39 weeks pregnant, was shocked to learn she has gestationa­l diabetes. Pregnant women in California are, like Thulien, increasing­ly facing a gestationa­l diabetes diagnosis, which comes with a range of health risks.
 ?? ARIC CRABB STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Nayeli Bernal plays with her daughter Amelia, 4, at Joaquin Miller Park on March 28 in Oakland. Bernal developed gestationa­l diabetes during two of her pregnancie­s.
ARIC CRABB STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Nayeli Bernal plays with her daughter Amelia, 4, at Joaquin Miller Park on March 28 in Oakland. Bernal developed gestationa­l diabetes during two of her pregnancie­s.
 ?? DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Tessa Thulien uses a blood glucose meter four times a day to check her blood sugar level. She is keeping close tabs on her gestationa­l diabetes.
DAI SUGANO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Tessa Thulien uses a blood glucose meter four times a day to check her blood sugar level. She is keeping close tabs on her gestationa­l diabetes.

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