Melkus Gail D'Eramo, Whittemore Robin, Mitchell Jessica
The Yale University School of Nursing, New Haven, Connecticut.
Diabetes Educ. 2009 Mar-Apr;35(2):293-301. doi: 10.1177/0145721708327532. Epub 2009 Feb 9.
The purpose of this secondary analysis was to describe and compare physiological, psychosocial, and self-management characteristics of urban black and rural white women with type 2 diabetes (T2D) in the northeast United States.
A descriptive, cross-sectional secondary analysis was conducted with baseline data from 2 independent study samples: rural white women and urban black women.
Results revealed the sample were on average educated, working, low-income, mid-life women with poor glycemic and blood pressure control, despite having a usual source of primary care. When compared, black women were younger, had lower income levels, worked more, and were often single and/or divorced. They had worse glycemic control, significantly higher levels of diabetes-related emotional distress, and less support than white women.
Despite differences in geography and study findings, both groups had suboptimal physiological and psychosocial levels that impede self-management. These findings serve to aid in the understanding of health disparities, emphasizing the importance of developing and evaluating effective interventions of diabetes care for women with T2D.
本次二次分析的目的是描述和比较美国东北部城市黑人女性和农村白人女性2型糖尿病(T2D)患者的生理、心理社会及自我管理特征。
利用来自两个独立研究样本(农村白人女性和城市黑人女性)的基线数据进行描述性横断面二次分析。
结果显示,尽管这些样本平均接受过教育、有工作、处于低收入的中年女性,且有常规的初级保健来源,但血糖和血压控制不佳。相比之下,黑人女性更年轻,收入水平更低,工作更多,且常为单身和/或离异。她们的血糖控制更差,糖尿病相关情绪困扰水平显著更高,且比白人女性获得的支持更少。
尽管地理位置和研究结果存在差异,但两组的生理和心理社会水平均未达到最佳状态,这阻碍了自我管理。这些发现有助于理解健康差异,强调了为T2D女性制定和评估有效糖尿病护理干预措施的重要性。