Dipartimento di Medicina Clinica e Chirurgia, Unità di Endocrinologia, Diabetologia e Andrologia, Università degli Studi Di Napoli Federico II, Naples, Italy.
Cattedra Unesco "Educazione alla salute e allo sviluppo sostenibile", University Federico II, Naples, Italy.
J Transl Med. 2024 Apr 9;22(1):342. doi: 10.1186/s12967-024-05007-y.
The COVID-19 pandemic caused societal disruption in the United States and most of the world, affecting many aspects of life, including healthcare and health-related behaviors such as diet, food security, and physical activity. Communities with economic and health disparities may have been particularly affected. This study was undertaken to determine how conditions in the early pandemic (January, 2021-February, 2022) affected Latino patients of Mexican Ancestry at high risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus who participated in El Banco por Salud biobank project in Tucson, Arizona.
Baseline, prepandemic measurements were available in 17, 21, and 60 patients with normal hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), prediabetes, and type 2 diabetes, respectively.
People with healthy HbA1c were significantly younger, less obese, and had higher HDL cholesterol. HbA1c was unaffected by the pandemic in any group. Triglycerides, total and HDL cholesterol levels fell in all groups during the pandemic. Physical activity levels in all groups were remarkably low, with most reporting no engagement in any voluntary physical activity. Engagement in physical activity or its enjoyment was lower in patients with diabetes and prediabetes than in younger, less obese patients. Major diet differences were between men and women and were present before the pandemic. Women consumed significantly more vegetables, fruit, and salad than men. The only pandemic-related change in diet was a drop in egg consumption, possibly explaining the fall in total cholesterol.
Societal disruption during the COVID-19 pandemic had minimal effects on adverse health-related behaviors, cardiometabolic risk, or changes in glycemic control in a Latino community with diabetes and healthcare disparities in the Southwest US.
COVID-19 大流行在美国和世界大部分地区造成了社会混乱,影响了生活的许多方面,包括医疗保健以及饮食、食品安全和体育活动等与健康相关的行为。经济和健康状况存在差异的社区可能受到了特别影响。本研究旨在确定 2021 年 1 月至 2022 年 2 月大流行早期的情况如何影响亚利桑那州图森市参与 El Banco por Salud 生物银行项目的、具有 2 型糖尿病高危风险的墨西哥裔拉丁裔患者。
在分别患有正常血红蛋白 A1c(HbA1c)、糖尿病前期和 2 型糖尿病的 17、21 和 60 名患者中,可获得基线和大流行前的测量值。
HbA1c 正常的患者明显更年轻、体重较轻,且高密度脂蛋白胆固醇水平较高。在任何一组中,HbA1c 均不受大流行的影响。在所有组中,甘油三酯、总胆固醇和高密度脂蛋白胆固醇水平在大流行期间均有所下降。所有组的身体活动水平都非常低,大多数人报告没有进行任何自愿性体力活动。与年轻、体重较轻的患者相比,患有糖尿病和糖尿病前期的患者参与体力活动或享受体力活动的程度较低。在男性和女性之间存在重大的饮食差异,并且在大流行之前就已经存在。女性摄入的蔬菜、水果和沙拉明显多于男性。与大流行相关的唯一饮食变化是鸡蛋摄入量下降,这可能解释了总胆固醇的下降。
在具有糖尿病和医疗保健差异的美国西南部拉丁裔社区中,COVID-19 大流行期间的社会混乱对不良与健康相关的行为、心血管代谢风险或血糖控制变化的影响很小。