Publication | Open Access
Culturally tailoring patient education and communication skills training to empower African-Americans with diabetes
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Citations
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References
2012
Year
Family MedicineHealth Care DisparityHealth DisparitiesNew Translational StrategiesSelf-care InterventionDiversity In Health CommunicationHealth CommunicationAfrican American StudiesPublic HealthTailored EducationHealth EducationDiabetes ManagementHealth PolicyHealth PromotionHealth EquityHealth LiteracyCommunity HealthNursingDiabetesHealth BehaviorPatient EducationDiabetes MellitusHealth Profession TrainingHdl CholesterolMedicineHealth DisparityCommunication Skills
New translational strategies are needed to improve diabetes outcomes among low-income African-Americans. Our goal was to develop/pilot test a patient intervention combining culturally tailored diabetes education with shared decision-making training. This was an observational cohort study. Surveys and clinical data were collected at baseline, program completion, and 3 and 6 months. There were 21 participants; the mean age was 61 years. Eighty-six percent of participants attended >70 % of classes. There were improvements in diabetes self-efficacy, self-care behaviors (i.e., following a "healthful eating plan" (mean score at baseline 3.4 vs. 5.2 at program's end; p = 0.002), self glucose monitoring (mean score at baseline 4.3 vs. 6.2 at program's end; p = 0.04), and foot care (mean score at baseline 4.1 vs. 6.0 at program's end; p = 0.001)), hemoglobin A1c (8.24 at baseline vs. 7.33 at 3-month follow-up, p = 0.02), and HDL cholesterol (51.2 at baseline vs. 61.8 at 6-month follow-up, p = 0.01). Combining tailored education with shared decision-making may be a promising strategy for empowering low-income African-Americans and improving health outcomes.
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