Researchers from the Brown School at Washington University in St Louis analysed county data from the US Census Bureau and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to find attributes associated with diabetes.
They discovered that results varied by region. Poverty levels and inactivity were associated with diabetes, but only in some areas.
"In one region of the US, poverty and lower education outcomes are more predictive of higher diabetes prevalence, while in other regions physical inactivity and obesity are more predictive," said lead author J Aaron Hipp, assistant professor at the Brown School.
"Given this clustering of predictors of diabetes prevalence, and knowing the effect of the predictors we used in our study, counties, states and regions should be able to better target the most common predictors of diabetes in their more local area," said Hipp, who is also a faculty scholar at Washington University's Institute for Public Health.
The study was published in the journal Preventing Chronic Disease.