Natural Sciences (Oct 2024)

Culturally appropriate options for diabetes self‐management: Results from a patient‐centered comparative effectiveness study

  • Janet Page‐Reeves,
  • Cristina Murray‐Krezan,
  • Mark R. Burge,
  • Shiraz I. Mishra,
  • Lidia Regino,
  • Molly Bleecker,
  • Daniel Perez Rodriguez,
  • Hannah Cole McGrew,
  • Elaine L. Bearer,
  • Erik Erhardt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ntls.20240002
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 4
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract This project compared the effectiveness of two evidence‐based models of culturally competent diabetes health promotion: the diabetes self‐management support empowerment model (DSMS) and the chronic care model (CCM). Our primary outcome was improvement in patient capacity for diabetes self‐management as measured by the diabetes knowledge questionnaire (DKQ) and the patient activation measure (PAM). Our secondary outcome was patient success at diabetes self‐management as measured by improvement in A1c, depression scores using the PHQ‐9, and body mass index (BMI). We also gathered data on the cultural competence of the program using the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Cultural Competence Set. We compared patient outcomes in two existing sites in Albuquerque, New Mexico that serve a large population of Latinx diabetes patients from low‐income households. Participants were enrolled as dyads—a patient participant (n = 226) and a social support participant (n = 226). Outcomes over time and by program were analyzed using longitudinal linear mixed modeling, adjusted for patient participant demographic characteristics and other potential confounding covariates. Secondary outcomes were also adjusted for potential confounders. Interactions with both time and program helped to assess outcomes. This study did not find a difference between the two sites with respect to the primary outcome measures and only one of the three secondary outcomes showed differential results. The main difference between programs was that depression decreased more for CCM than for DSMS. An exploratory, subgroup analysis revealed that at CCM, patient participants with a very high A1c (>10) demonstrated a clinically meaningful decrease. However, given the higher cultural competence rating for the CCM, statistically significant improvement in depression, and the importance of social support to the patients, results suggest that a culturally and contextually situated diabetes self‐management and education program design may deliver benefit for patients, especially for patients with higher A1c levels. Key Points The team was interdisciplinary. The information presented describes results of both qualitative and quantitative data and involves interpretations that are interdisciplinary in nature. The study design used methods from multiple disciplines.

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