An ethnic population at high risk for type 2 diabetes achieved significant control of the disease through participation in community-based health programs, demonstrating that active intervention and culturally sensitive education can reverse the course of certain illnesses. This is according to a randomized controlled trial published January 31 by researchers at NYU Langone Health’s Department of Population Health in the journal Clinical Diabetes.
The Diabetes Research, Education, and Action for Minorities, or DREAM, trial took place in several neighborhoods throughout New York City heavily populated by Bangladeshi Americans, who have a notably higher rate of type 2 diabetes than the general Unites States population. The study participants were randomly assigned to either a control group or a group that participated in several educations sessions with community health workers.
After 6 months, over 55 percent of those in the intervention group had blood sugar levels of 7 percent or less—a measure of type 2 diabetes management also known as hemoglobin A1c levels—compared to 42 percent in the control group.
“This is the first study of a community-based program to help New York City’s Bangladeshi community control diabetes,” says Nadia S. Islam, PhD, principal investigator of DREAM and associate professor of population health at NYU School of Medicine. “To the broader issue of disease management, these results add to a growing body of evidence showing that community health worker programs are a low-cost and effective strategy for controlling certain chronic diseases.”
Bangladeshi immigrants make up the fastest growing segment of South Asians in the U.S., numbering over 3.4 million—with a majority living in New York City. Foreign-born South Asians also are at greater risk of diabetes than the general population. A recent study in New York City concluded that 35 percent of South Asians had type 2 diabetes while another study in California found a prevalence of 29 percent—compared to a rate of slightly more than 9 percent among the general U.S. population.
The researchers attribute this unusually high incidence of type 2 diabetes to several factors: heredity, economic hardship, language barriers, and illiteracy and culture differences. These, in turn, create barriers to adequate healthcare.
To help overcome these barriers, the researchers developed intervention and health education programs led by community-based health workers, who were hired and trained by centers like NYU Langone, and who often come from the same ethnic background and communities as the populations they serve.
“They understand specific challenges and tailor interventions appropriately, facilitating a community’s involvement in its own care,” says Chau Trinh-Shevrin, DrPH, associate professor of population health at NYU School of Medicine and the study’s senior investigator. “Community-based health workers build on existing bonds and encourage leadership around health.”
How the Trial Was Conducted
The DREAM study enrolled 336 participants who identified as Bangladeshis; resided in New York City; were between 21 and 75 years old; and had a confirmed diagnosis of type 2 diabetes—defined as a hemoglobin A1c level of 6.5 percent or higher.
The researchers randomly assigned 176 participants into an intervention group that participated in 5, 2-hour monthly educational sessions led by bilingual Bangladeshi health workers, covering topics including nutrition and healthy eating; physical activity; complications of type 2 diabetes; preventive self-care; and stress management and family support. Each individual also participated in two, one-on-one visits where they set individual health goals.
The other 160 participants were assigned to a control group, who were invited only to the first educational session, an overview of diabetes.
At end of the trial period, 36.3 percent of the intervention group achieved control or stabilization of their hemoglobin A1c levels (defined as under 7 percent) compared with 24.6 percent of the control group. In addition, 55.2 percent of intervention group also had decreased A1c levels at the end of the study, compared to 42.5 percent in the control group.
The researchers also found that both the intervention and control groups reported overall changes in behavior, including increased diabetes knowledge, increased weekly physical activity, and weekly monitoring of blood sugar. “This suggests that even minimal community engagement around health made an impact,” Dr. Islam says.
In addition to Drs. Islam and Trinh-Shevrin, additional study authors include Laura C. Wyatt, MPH, and MD Taher, MPH, of the Department of Population Health at NYU Langone; Lindsey Riley, MPH, of The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research; S. Darius Tandon, PhD, of Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine; and Michael Tanner, MD, of the Department of Medicine at NYU Langone.
The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health–National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities grant P60MD000538; National Institutes of Health–National Center for the Advancement of Translational Science grant UL1TR000038; and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention grants U48DP001904 and U58DP005621.
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