Kenya Sonjia, Lebron Cynthia Nicole, Chang Aileen Yu Hen, Li Hua, Alonzo Yisel A, Carrasquillo Olveen
Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA;
Jay Weiss Institute at Sylvester Cancer Center, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA.
J Community Hosp Intern Med Perspect. 2015 Apr 1;5(2):26586. doi: 10.3402/jchimp.v5.26586. eCollection 2015.
Latinos are the largest minority group in the United States and diabetes or pre-diabetes affects more than 70% of Latinos aged 45 years and older. Miami-Dade County is home to one of the highest populations of diverse Latinos. In this descriptive manuscript, we present baseline characteristics of participants enrolled in the Miami Healthy Heart Initiative (MHHI). This was a study conducted to determine the effects of a community health worker (CHW) intervention among Latinos with poorly controlled diabetes in South Florida.
We recruited 300 diverse Latino adults with suboptimal diabetes outcomes (HbA1c≥8) into MHHI. This randomized control trial examined the impact of a 1-year CHW-led intervention on glycemic control, blood pressure, and cholesterol levels. At baseline, physiologic measures, including HbA1c, LDL, blood pressure, and BMI, were assessed. Data on socio-demographic characteristics and additional determinants of health such as depression status, provider communication, diet, exercise, cigarette smoking, readiness to change diabetes management behaviors (stages of change), and confidence in ability to improve diabetes self-care (self-efficacy) were collected.
Participants came from 20 different countries, with Cuban Americans representing 38% of the sample. Most had lived in the US for more than 10 years, had completed at least 12 years of school, and had high levels of health literacy, yet 48% had very low acculturation. Nearly 80% had poor self-efficacy, 80% met the criteria for depression, and 83% were not adherent to their medications. More than half the population was not at their target for blood pressure, 50% were above the recommended LDL goal, and most were obese.
In a diverse population of Latinos with poorly controlled diabetes in Miami, we found high rates of depression, obesity, medication non-adherence, poor self-efficacy, and provider communication. These may contribute to poor diabetes control, high blood pressure, and elevated cholesterol.
拉丁裔是美国最大的少数族裔群体,糖尿病或糖尿病前期影响着超过70%的45岁及以上拉丁裔人群。迈阿密 - 戴德县是不同拉丁裔人口最多的地区之一。在这份描述性手稿中,我们展示了参与迈阿密健康心脏倡议(MHHI)的参与者的基线特征。这是一项旨在确定社区卫生工作者(CHW)干预对南佛罗里达州糖尿病控制不佳的拉丁裔人群影响的研究。
我们招募了300名糖尿病控制不佳(糖化血红蛋白≥8)的不同拉丁裔成年人参与MHHI。这项随机对照试验研究了由社区卫生工作者主导的为期1年的干预对血糖控制、血压和胆固醇水平的影响。在基线时,评估了包括糖化血红蛋白、低密度脂蛋白、血压和体重指数在内的生理指标。收集了社会人口学特征数据以及其他健康决定因素的数据,如抑郁状态、与医疗服务提供者的沟通、饮食、运动、吸烟、改变糖尿病管理行为的意愿(改变阶段)以及改善糖尿病自我护理能力的信心(自我效能感)。
参与者来自20个不同的国家,其中古巴裔美国人占样本的38%。大多数人在美国生活了10年以上,完成了至少12年的学业,并且具有较高的健康素养,但48%的人文化适应程度很低。近80%的人自我效能感差,80%的人符合抑郁症标准,83%的人不坚持服药。超过一半的人血压未达标,50%的人低密度脂蛋白高于推荐目标,大多数人肥胖。
在迈阿密糖尿病控制不佳的多样化拉丁裔人群中,我们发现抑郁症、肥胖症、药物不依从、自我效能感差以及与医疗服务提供者沟通不良的发生率很高。这些可能导致糖尿病控制不佳、高血压和胆固醇升高。