School of Health Sciences, Liverpool Hope University, Hope Park, Liverpool.
Int J Gen Med. 2013 Jul 29;6:617-28. doi: 10.2147/IJGM.S46649. Print 2013.
This study investigated ethnic differences in diabetes-specific knowledge, illness perceptions, self-management, and metabolic control among black-African, black-Caribbean,and white-British populations with type 2 diabetes. The study also examined associations between demographic/disease characteristics and diabetes-specific knowledge, illness perceptions, self-management, and metabolic control in each of the three ethnic groups.
Cross-sectional.
Diabetes/retinal screening clinics in Hackney and Brent, London.
Black-African, black-Caribbean and white-British populations with type 2 diabetes were asked to participate. Questionnaires measuring demographic/disease characteristics, diabetes-specific knowledge, self-management, and illness perceptions were used for data collection. Data for glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) and microvascular complications were obtained from medical records. Ethnic differences in diabetes-related measures were estimated using analysis of variance/covariance. Multiple regression techniques were used to determine relationships between demographic/disease characteristics and measured diabetes-related outcomes.
Three hundred and fifty-nine patients participated in the study. White-British participants had high diabetes-specific knowledge compared to their black-African and black-Caribbean counterparts. Black-Africans reported better adherence to self-management recommendations than the other ethnic groups. Compared to the white-British patients, black-African and black-Caribbean participants perceived diabetes as a benign condition that could be cured. Educational status and treatment category were determinants of diabetes-specific knowledge in all three ethnic groups. However, different demographic/disease characteristics predicted adherence to self-management recommendations in each ethnic group.
Clearly, there is disease (diabetes) knowledge-perception variation between different ethnic groups in the UK which may partly influence overall disease outcome. It is plausible to recommend screening, identifying, and dispelling misconceptions about diabetes among ethnic minority patients by health care professionals as well as emphasizing the importance of self-management in managing chronic diseases such as diabetes.
本研究调查了 2 型糖尿病的黑非洲人、黑加勒比人和白英国人种之间在糖尿病专业知识、疾病认知、自我管理和代谢控制方面的种族差异。该研究还检查了在这三个种族群体中,人口统计学/疾病特征与糖尿病专业知识、疾病认知、自我管理和代谢控制之间的关联。
横断面研究。
伦敦哈克尼和布伦特的糖尿病/视网膜筛查诊所。
邀请了 2 型糖尿病的黑非洲人、黑加勒比人和白英国人种参与。使用问卷来测量人口统计学/疾病特征、糖尿病专业知识、自我管理和疾病认知。从病历中获取糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)和微血管并发症的数据。使用方差/协方差分析来估计与糖尿病相关的测量指标在种族之间的差异。使用多元回归技术来确定人口统计学/疾病特征与测量的糖尿病相关结果之间的关系。
共有 359 名患者参与了研究。与黑非洲人和黑加勒比人相比,白英国人种的糖尿病专业知识较高。黑非洲人报告的自我管理建议的依从性优于其他种族群体。与白英国人种患者相比,黑非洲人和黑加勒比人认为糖尿病是一种良性疾病,可以治愈。教育程度和治疗类别是所有三个种族群体糖尿病专业知识的决定因素。然而,不同的人口统计学/疾病特征预测了每个种族群体的自我管理建议的依从性。
显然,英国不同种族群体之间存在疾病(糖尿病)知识-认知差异,这可能在一定程度上影响整体疾病结果。建议医疗保健专业人员对少数民族患者进行筛查、识别和消除对糖尿病的误解,并强调自我管理在管理糖尿病等慢性疾病方面的重要性。