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Researcher
works to help Mexican Americans with Type 2
Diabetes
Newswise — Starr County, Texas, sits on the Texas-Mexico
border along the banks of the Rio Grande
River. Populated largely by Mexican
Americans, it is a rural county where some
of the residents live in colonias,
unincorporated areas with no city services.
The county seat, Rio Grande City, is home to approximately
15,000 people. Scratch the surface and Starr
County has one surprising distinguishing
feature: one of the highest prevalence rates
of type 2 diabetes in the entire country,
and the highest diabetes death rate in
Texas.
Type 2 diabetes is now being designated a world-wide
epidemic, and increasing prevalence rates in
the United States are causing great concern.
According to Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G.
Thompson, "With 16 million diabetics and
counting, diabetes is growing at an alarming
rate in America."
The U.S. saw a 6% jump in diabetes rates in 1999 alone.
Type 2 diabetes, which accounts for 90-95%
of diabetes cases, has its onset during
adulthood. Researchers believe that its
occurrence can be accounted for by genetics
less than half of the time. The rest of the
cases are likely due to individual
lifestyles.
Starr County is one of a handful of areas where diabetes rates are unaccountably
high.
A full 50% of the adults over the age of 35 in Starr County either have
diabetes themselves or have a first-degree
relative with the disease, which means they
are at very high risk of getting it
themselves.
Geneticists from The University of Texas at Houston School of Public
Health have been working in Starr County for
decades trying to determine why the diabetes
rate is so elevated there.
Exploring Intervention
In 1988, Dr. Sharon Brown, then a professor of nursing at
The University of Texas Health Science
Center at Houston, got involved. Brown
wanted to find a way to help the residents
of Starr County manage their diabetes with
an intervention program that would provide
education and support.
Through a series of small grants from the State of Texas
and the National Institutes of Health, she
and her researchers began to assess the
community to see what was needed.
In 1993, the National Institutes of Health requested
proposals for diabetes projects focused on
interventions targeting minority
communities.
Brown and her team of UT Houston researchers were awarded a
grant of more than $1 million—at that point,
the largest in UT Houston School of Nursing
history—to improve the health of Mexican
American residents of Starr County.
The grant funded the study from 1994-98, and a subsequent
grant funded a follow-up study from
1999-2004.
Dr. Sharon Brown (right), associate vice president of
research at The University of Texas at
Austin, has been helping residents of Starr
County manage their diabetes since 1988.
Sharon Brown, now associate vice president of research at
The University of Texas at Austin, says that
from the beginning, "Our intent has been to
address the cultural needs of Mexican
Americans with diabetes, because to this day
in many communities around the U.S., Mexican
Americans are still being misadvised in
terms of what they need to do to manage
their condition on a day-to-day basis."
She says that intervention in Mexican American communities
has been slow because of the prevailing
stereotype that Mexican Americans will not
follow medical advice. Often there is no
access to adequate medical care, and advice
about the disease—in some cases
uninformed—comes from their family and other
people with diabetes. Brown's study is "an
attempt to teach them how to take proper
care of their diabetes themselves."
The first phase of the study created an intensive,
year-long program focused around education
and social support from family and friends.
The current second phase is testing a refined version of
the intervention in an attempt to create an
efficient, cost-effective strategy that can
be integrated in medical care sites, such as
community clinics.
In both phases, participants are between the ages of 35 and
70 years old. They are selected from a
research database of known diabetics in the
community that was developed by the UT
Houston researchers, and willing
participants are required to attend
intervention classes with a spouse or
first-degree relative.
Participants and their family members become part of a
small group that works for the duration of
the study with intervention teams made up of
bilingual Mexican American nurses,
dietitians, and community workers.
Helping from Within the Community
Sharon Brown received her Ph.D. in nursing from The
University of Texas at Austin in 1987 while
serving as an assistant professor of nursing
at The University of Texas Health Science
Center at Houston. In 1995 she moved to
Austin to become associate dean of research
and the James R. Dougherty, Jr. Centennial
Professor for the School of Nursing.
From the beginning of her research in Starr County,
Brown recognized that she would be entering
the community as an outsider. But she didn't
want to create an intervention program where
people arrived from elsewhere and tried to
influence a community distant from their
own.
All intervention team members are Mexican American,
bilingual residents of the border community.
Most of the instructors are full-time
employees elsewhere and work on the
intervention as a second job in the
evenings.
The intervention team members in Starr County are
University of Texas employees, but they are
also Starr County residents. When the
program was first started in 1994, they came
to Houston for a week-long training program
in diabetes care.
Over the years Brown herself has been involved in the
ongoing training of the instructors and data
collectors, and also in providing health
advice for study participants.
But she has resisted the urge to send nurses and
dietitians from Houston or Austin to do the
work, relying instead on professionals from
the border area.
Alexandra Garcia (right), a Ph.D. student in the School of
Nursing at The University of Texas at
Austin, has been involved with the Starr
County diabetes study during her entire
doctoral program.
For nursing students at The University of Texas at Austin,
the program has provided a chance to see how
an intervention program works first-hand.
Undergraduate students and summer research
interns have visited Starr County as part of
the School of Nursing community health
program or as part of some of the research
training grants that the School has
received.
While in Starr County, students have observed intervention
and data collection sessions, toured the
Texas-Mexico border area, including the
colonias where the diabetes study draws some
of its participants, and talked to the
study's nurses, dieticians, community
workers, research office staff and
participants about diabetes health issues.
Although there is a research field office in Rio Grande
City, interventions are held in churches,
schools and day care centers throughout the
community.
Brown says they want to "take the program to the
participants."
This is a significant opportunity for the residents of
Starr County, because across the country
only 10% of people with diabetes have access
to, or can afford, diabetes self-management
education programs.
Class size is limited to 16, with 8 diabetics and 8 support
people. Alexandra Garcia, a Ph.D. student in
nursing at The University of Texas at Austin
who has been involved with the study during
her entire doctoral program, notes that the
classes can become a social event.
Members of the group get to know one another and interact
frequently among themselves and with the
intervention team.
Class topics range from teaching participants how to take
their medications to learning how blood
sugars react to various things such as
exercise, stress, medicines, and foods.
Participants are taken on field trips to the local
grocery store, given cooking demonstrations
and taught how to introduce new foods with
less fat and more fiber into their diets, as
well as how to modify their favorite recipes
to make them more healthy.
The focus is on helping participants to integrate diabetes
care into their everyday lives and to do so
in a way that they can sustain.
In addition to information, participants are given free
monitors to help them keep track of their
blood sugar levels and free lab work,
essential elements of diabetes care that are
sometimes unaffordable for patients.
The grant money covers these services, and monitor
companies have often donated their
equipment. The program does not provide
medications, but it does help participants
to fill out paperwork for other programs
that offer free supplies and medicine.
The intent is to make the diabetes program as comprehensive
as possible, giving participants what they
need to improve their means of living with
the condition.
Seeing Results
And it is working. The 1994-98 phase of the study included
502 participants, and results indicate that
the study had a significant impact on
improving people's diabetes control. Blood
sugar levels, which in this community were
very high, were brought down significantly.
Even more important was a reduction in their glycosylated
hemoglobin levels, a measure of what blood
sugar levels have been over the past two to
three months and a more stable indicator of
progress.
Other research has shown that for every half percentage
point decrease in glycosylated hemoglobin,
the risk of complications from diabetes is
reduced 35-50%.
The Starr County intervention achieved a 1.4 percentage
point difference between the treatment group
and the comparison group at 6 months.
Juan Treviño, a dietician from Starr County, provides
nutrition education services for
participants of the diabetes study at a
local church in Rio Grande City.
Brown admits that there are some complexities in measuring
the success of this program.
Most diabetes research has been done on non-Hispanics and
the results don't account for the
differences that race can present.
In the population being studied in Starr County, the
glycosylated hemoglobin and blood sugar
levels begin at such high levels that
bringing them down to a level considered
normal in other populations is extremely
difficult.
The glycosylated hemoglobin measurement essentially tracks
how much glucose attaches to the hemoglobin
in the red blood cells.
The target level is less than 7%. In most places around the
country, a number over 8% would cause
concern.
In the population in Starr County, the levels are regularly
over 10%, and the program has had
participants who came in with levels up to
18%.
The Starr County diabetes intervention program has
maintained an impressive 90% retention rate
for the data collection sessions.
Almost everyone who starts the program stays for the
required length and reports for data
collection sessions that are scheduled on a
regular basis.
In fact, the program has been strongly embraced by the
people of Starr County. When the grant was
refunded for a follow-up study from
1999-2004, the goal was to make beneficial
adjustments to the intervention.
In focus groups, the program received very few criticisms
and was so resoundingly popular that
participants were anxious to have their
friends and family members join.
Looking at the Long Term
Sharon Brown and her colleagues realized that a year-long
program presented difficulties for their
participants. They are testing shorter
versions of the program to enable easier
transference into clinical sites.
While the research field office in Starr County will be
maintained into the future, and the
intervention program will continue to hold
classes in the community, the ultimate goal
is to integrate the program into clinics and
hospitals so that a greater number of people
with diabetes can benefit from learning
diabetes self-management.
One step in making the program more widely accessible was
to develop a series of educational
videotapes.
Because some of the participants didn't read or write
English or Spanish, video became an
efficient alternative for disseminating
information to them.
However, nothing was available in Spanish at an appropriate
learning level, so the UT Health Science
Center at Houston funded a series of seven
videotapes produced in both Spanish and
English and filmed in Starr County.
Designed for a general audience, the tapes give information
and stimulate discussion in classes.
The videos have been widely distributed around the country
and have been donated to clinics all over
South Texas.
In fact, the Starr County diabetes research study has
prompted a number of similar studies
throughout the U.S., and Brown is contacted
on a nearly weekly basis to consult on new
projects.
When the Mayo Medical School wanted advice on their
diabetes education program, it turned to
Sharon Brown. She was the first nurse to be
invited to the medical school in Rochester,
Minnesota, as a visiting professor.
This honor is one of many bestowed on her. She repeatedly
won the Dean's Teaching Excellence Award at
UT Houston, as well as the Faculty Research
Award at The University of Texas at Austin.
In 1998 she became a fellow in The American
Academy of Nursing.
However, none of this has shifted Brown's focus from Starr
County. One of the things she is most proud
of is the way she and her program have been
accepted in the community.
The long-term relationships she has developed are important
to her. She believes strongly that the
research must always be tailored to the
community itself and how it will benefit the
citizens.
A Legacy in Starr County
The Starr County Health Studies Research Office in Rio
Grande City opened in 1980 and continues to
serve the community by providing
diabetes-related research and screening.
One of the greatest legacies of the study, Brown contends,
is that "if we walked away today, all of the
nurses and dieticians that have worked on
the project now have considerable experience
working with adults with type 2 diabetes."
Many of them are Certified Diabetes Educators." Becoming a
Certified Diabetes Educator, a relatively
new certification, requires a college
degree, two years of experience working with
diabetes education, and a comprehensive
examination. These professionals, who were
trained through Brown's study, are prepared
to teach people with diabetes how to manage
their condition over the long term.
Brown is also seeking additional funding opportunities to
establish a permanent diabetes education
center for the Starr County community, where
classes could be held.
In addition, she hopes to integrate what they have learned
into hospital and clinic settings and to
train professionals to support diabetics in
a realistic way, taking into account a
patient's culture and individual needs.
Dr. Sharon Brown reflects that when she was a student in
nursing school, she learned early on that
diabetes was one disease you could do
something about and make a significant
difference in people's lives.
"What we try to get the people with diabetes to do is to
practice what we all should be doing in
terms of healthy lifestyles.
"So I find it very rewarding, particularly with those
individuals in the project who have made
monumental changes in their health."
Those monumental changes mean longer, healthier lives for
the people of Starr County in the Rio Grande
Valley.
Their diabetes care has been greatly improved because Dr.
Sharon Brown and her University of Texas
team dedicated themselves to that community
and got everyone involved.
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