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Hispanics have more
difficulty controlling Diabetes than
Non-Hispanic Whites
Newswise — Results of
an analysis of multiple studies show
diabetes control is more challenging for
Hispanics than non-Hispanic whites,
according to researchers at Wake Forest
University Baptist Medical Center and
colleagues.
The results revealed
that Hispanic patients with diabetes have
approximately 0.5 percent higher levels on a
test that measures blood sugar control,
called the A1C test, than non-Hispanic white
patients.
The researchers noted the
consistency of these findings across the
studies.
An A1C test measures
hemoglobin linked with glucose, or blood
sugar, over a time period of two to three
months. Higher A1C values indicate patients
have difficulty controlling their blood
sugar.
The results of the
“meta-analysis” are reported in the February
issue of Diabetes Care.
A meta-analysis
combines the results of several studies that
used similar methods and procedures.
This
allows the capability to generate larger
numbers than from a single study and detect
differences that didn’t show up in
individual studies.
“These findings are
interesting because they evaluate all
available information from studies that
include both Hispanic and non-Hispanic
whites over a period of 13 years,” said
Julienne Kirk, PharmD, associate professor
of family and community medicine at Wake
Forest University School of Medicine, and
lead author of the study.
Kirk says that knowing
some minority groups may have higher A1C
could impact early treatment and awareness.
The researchers
reviewed 495 studies, and narrowed their
analysis down to 11 studies that comprised
results of A1C tests for Hispanics and
non-Hispanic whites, who were at least 18
years of age, and were not considered to
have prediabetes or gestational diabetes.
According to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC), the incidence per 1,000 of diagnosed
diabetes of those between 18 and 79 years
was 10.2 percent for Hispanic or Latino
individuals compared with 6.9 percent for
non-Hispanic whites in 2005.
“We were not surprised
by these findings since ethnic minorities in
the U.S. are disproportionately affected by
diabetes, and we found a similar trend in
the African American population with
diabetes a year ago,” said Kirk.
“What did
surprise us were the results of our analysis
of subgroups of patients with managed care
and non-managed care insurance. The largest
difference for A1C was among non-managed
care insurance groups.”
The authors recommend
development of strategies that focus not
only on discovering the source of the
differences in diabetes control between the
two groups, but also on reducing these
disparities.
“A high percentage of
Hispanics in this country have low incomes,
no health insurance, and limited access to
health care,” said Kirk.
“The Hispanic
population has a high prevalence of diabetes
and higher A1C than non-Hispanic whites.
This further elucidates the health
disparities that characterize the Hispanic
population.”
Co-authors for the
study were Leah Passmore, M.S., Ronny Bell,
Ph.D., Ralph D’Agostino Jr., Ph.D., Thomas
Arcury, Ph.D., Sara Quandt, Ph.D., all with
Wake Forest, and K.M. Venkat Narayan, M.D.,
M.P.H., M.B.A., with Emory University.
The research was funded
by the CDC and the Association of Teachers
of Preventative Medicine.
Wake Forest University
Baptist Medical Center is an academic health
system comprised of North Carolina Baptist
Hospital, Brenner Children’s Hospital and
Wake Forest University Health Sciences,
which operates the university’s School of
Medicine and Piedmont Triad Research Park.
The system comprises
1,154 acute care, rehabilitation and
long-term care beds and has been ranked as
one of “America’s Best Hospitals” by U.S.
News & World Report since 1993. Wake Forest
Baptist is ranked 32nd in the nation by
America’s Top Doctors for the number of its
doctors considered best by their peers.
The
institution ranks in the top third in
funding by the National Institutes of Health
and 4th in the Southeastern United States in
revenues from its licensed intellectual
property.
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