Hawthorne Kamila, Robles Yolanda, Cannings-John Rebecca, Edwards Adrian Gk
Department of Primary Care and Public Health, Cardiff University, 3rd Floor, Neuadd Meirionnydd Building. School of Medicine, Heath Park, Cardiff, UK, CF14 4XN.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2008 Jul 16(3):CD006424. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD006424.pub2.
Ethnic minority groups in upper-middle and high income countries tend to be socio-economically disadvantaged and to have higher prevalence of type 2 diabetes than the majority population.
To assess the effectiveness of culturally appropriate diabetes health education on important outcome measures in type 2 diabetes.
We searched the The Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, ERIC, SIGLE and reference lists of articles. We also contacted authors in the field and handsearched commonly encountered journals.
RCTs of culturally appropriate diabetes health education for people over 16 years with type 2 diabetes mellitus from named ethnic minority groups resident in upper-middle or high income countries.
Two authors independently assessed trial quality and extracted data. Where there were disagreements in selection of papers for inclusion, all four authors discussed the studies. We contacted study authors for additional information when data appeared to be missing or needed clarification.
Eleven trials involving 1603 people were included, with ten trials providing suitable data for entry into meta-analysis. Glycaemic control (HbA1c), showed an improvement following culturally appropriate health education at three months (weight mean difference (WMD) - 0.3%, 95% CI -0.6 to -0.01), and at six months (WMD -0.6%, 95% CI -0.9 to -0.4), compared with control groups who received 'usual care'. This effect was not significant at 12 months post intervention (WMD -0.1%, 95% CI -0.4 to 0.2). Knowledge scores also improved in the intervention groups at three months (standardised mean difference (SMD) 0.6, 95% CI 0.4 to 0.7), six months (SMD 0.5, 95% CI 0.3 to 0.7) and twelve months (SMD 0.4, 95% CI 0.1 to 0.6) post intervention. Other outcome measures both clinical (such as lipid levels, and blood pressure) and patient centred (quality of life measures, attitude scores and measures of patient empowerment and self-efficacy) showed no significant improvement compared with control groups.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Culturally appropriate diabetes health education appears to have short term effects on glycaemic control and knowledge of diabetes and healthy lifestyles. None of the studies were long-term, and so clinically important long-term outcomes could not be studied. No studies included an economic analysis. The heterogeneity of studies made subgroup comparisons difficult to interpret with confidence. There is a need for long-term, standardised multi-centre RCTs that compare different types and intensities of culturally appropriate health education within defined ethnic minority groups.
中高收入国家的少数民族群体在社会经济方面往往处于不利地位,2型糖尿病的患病率高于多数人群。
评估符合文化特点的糖尿病健康教育对2型糖尿病重要结局指标的有效性。
我们检索了考克兰图书馆、医学期刊数据库、荷兰医学文摘数据库、心理学文摘数据库、护理学与健康领域数据库、教育资源信息中心数据库、灰色文献数据库以及文章的参考文献列表。我们还联系了该领域的作者,并手工检索了常见期刊。
针对居住在中高收入国家、年龄在16岁以上、来自特定少数民族群体且患有2型糖尿病的人群进行的符合文化特点的糖尿病健康教育随机对照试验。
两位作者独立评估试验质量并提取数据。在纳入论文的选择上存在分歧时,四位作者共同讨论这些研究。当数据似乎缺失或需要澄清时,我们联系研究作者获取更多信息。
纳入了11项涉及1603人的试验,其中10项试验提供了适合纳入荟萃分析的数据。与接受“常规护理”的对照组相比,符合文化特点的健康教育在三个月时(加权均数差(WMD)-0.3%,95%置信区间-0.6至-0.01)和六个月时(WMD -0.6%,95%置信区间-0.9至-0.4)对血糖控制(糖化血红蛋白)有改善作用。干预后12个月时这种效果不显著(WMD -0.1%,95%置信区间-0.4至0.2)。干预组在干预后三个月(标准化均数差(SMD)0.6,95%置信区间0.4至0.7)、六个月(SMD 0.5,95%置信区间0.3至0.7)和十二个月(SMD 0.4,95%置信区间0.1至0.6)时知识得分也有所提高。与对照组相比,其他结局指标,包括临床指标(如血脂水平和血压)以及以患者为中心的指标(生活质量指标、态度得分以及患者赋权和自我效能指标)均未显示出显著改善。
符合文化特点的糖尿病健康教育似乎对血糖控制以及糖尿病和健康生活方式的知识有短期影响。没有一项研究是长期的,因此无法研究临床上重要的长期结局。没有研究纳入经济分析。研究的异质性使得亚组比较难以自信地解释。需要进行长期、标准化的多中心随机对照试验,比较特定少数民族群体中不同类型和强度的符合文化特点的健康教育。