Aboriginal Health Council of South Australia, 9 King William Road, Adelaide, SA, 5061, Australia.
College of Public Health, Medical and Veterinary Sciences, James Cook University, Cairns, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2015 Apr 3;15:325. doi: 10.1186/s12889-015-1660-2.
Indigenous Australian adults with diabetes continue to have suboptimal clinical control and poorer outcomes compared with non-Indigenous people although there is a paucity of data documenting the detailed health status of Indigenous people in Australia. To further investigate the characteristics of Indigenous Australian adults with poorly controlled diabetes we analysed baseline data from a cluster randomized trial aiming to deliver a program of integrated community-based intensive chronic disease management for Indigenous people in remote communities in far north Queensland, Australia.
Indigenous adults aged 18 to 65 years from 12 clinics in rural north Queensland with established type 2 diabetes and with HbA1c ≥ 8.5% were invited to participate. The primary outcome variable measured at baseline was HbA1c. Other variables measured included socio-demographic indicators, health literacy, BMI, blood pressure, lipids, renal function, smoking status and quality of life measures. Data were collected between December 2010 and July 2011. Analysis was performed by ethnicity - Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander.
One hundred and ninety three participants were included in the analysis. Very high rates of albuminuria, high rates of smoking, dyslipidaemia, hypertension and elevated BMI were recorded. Aboriginal participants reported higher levels of socio-economic disadvantage, higher smoking rates, lower BMI and worse self-reported health status than Torres Strait Islander participants.
These results demonstrate a high potential for improved culturally sound community-based management of diabetes and other comorbid conditions in this very high risk population. They also provide further evidence for including albuminuria in cardiovascular risk calculation.
尽管有关澳大利亚土著居民详细健康状况的数据匮乏,但与非土著居民相比,澳大利亚的成年糖尿病土著居民的临床控制仍不理想,结局更差。为了进一步调查血糖控制不佳的澳大利亚土著成年人的特征,我们分析了旨在为澳大利亚远北昆士兰州偏远社区的土著居民提供综合社区强化慢性疾病管理项目的一项集群随机试验的基线数据。
从昆士兰州北部农村的 12 个诊所邀请了年龄在 18 至 65 岁之间、患有 2 型糖尿病且 HbA1c≥8.5%的土著成年人参加。在基线测量的主要结果变量是 HbA1c。测量的其他变量包括社会人口学指标、健康素养、BMI、血压、血脂、肾功能、吸烟状况和生活质量指标。数据收集于 2010 年 12 月至 2011 年 7 月。按种族(原住民或托雷斯海峡岛民)进行分析。
共有 193 名参与者被纳入分析。白蛋白尿率很高,吸烟率、血脂异常、高血压和 BMI 升高的发生率也很高。与托雷斯海峡岛民参与者相比,原住民参与者报告了更高的社会经济劣势程度、更高的吸烟率、更低的 BMI 和更差的自我报告健康状况。
这些结果表明,在这个高风险人群中,非常需要基于文化的社区管理来改善糖尿病和其他合并症的管理。它们还提供了将白蛋白尿纳入心血管风险计算的进一步证据。