Telephone communications
credited with improving health
Newswise — In this high-tech world
of electronic communications, the older, reliable form of
communication via the telephone has proven effective in reaching out
to older African-American women with diabetes. From research
presented today at ISHIB2005, elderly African-American women with
diabetes receiving direct phone communication had improved
problem-solving skills, psychosocial adjustment, and increased
levels of exercise compared to those in the study’s control group.
Age, ethnicity, lower
socioeconomic status and being female increase the likelihood of
developing diabetes and its complications. Older African-American
women are among the group with the highest rates of diabetes in this
country. The Centers for Disease and Control reports that 33% of
African-American women ages 60-74 years have diabetes, compared to
16% of White women of the same age group.1 For middle-aged women,
type 2 diabetes is more than twice as common among non-Whites as it
is among Whites. Among women aged 50-59 years, the prevalence is 23%
for Blacks, 24% for Mexican Americans, and 9.7% for Whites.1
The study presented today at
ISHIB2005 was designed to determine ways to reduce these diabetes
health disparities and to improve health outcomes. Knowing that many
issues hinder efforts to provide appropriate care to older
African-American women, researcher Emelia Amoako, PhD designed a
study that shows that the older form of communication – the
telephone – can be used to deliver a convenient, low-cost and
individualized intervention appropriate for the African-American
culture.
To conduct the study, Amoako
selected 68 participants (mean age of 61 years) who had been
diagnosed with diabetes within two years. Half the participants were
randomly assigned to the experimental group and the others to a
control group. Through phone communication, those in the
experimental group received interventions including diabetes
information; patient-provider communication; problem-solving
techniques; and cognitive reframing. These participants received
individually tailored information on the cause, diagnosis and
management of diabetes, as well as a list of available
diabetes-related resources in their county of residence.
Participants also received printed information on diabetes
self-management.
“This study has shown that
teaching problem-solving skills and assisting older African-American
women to apply these skills enabled them to overcome barriers to
physical activity/exercise and the maintenance of newly established
behaviors that assist with diabetes self-care,” stated Amoako, who
is an assistant professor at the School of Nursing at the University
of North Carolina at Greensboro. “We demonstrated that the telephone
is useful in helping older African-American women cope with
diabetes.”
This research was funded through
the John A. Hartford Foundation and its Building Academic Geriatric
Nursing Capacity Program. Amoako is a scholar of the foundation,
dedicated to improving the health outcomes of older individuals
through research and education. Amoako’s colleagues, Anne H. Skelly
PhD and Sandy Funk PhD of UNC-Chapel Hill School of Nursing, also
participated in the study design and research processes.
These research findings were
presented at ISHIB2005 during the poster presentation session on
Sunday, July 17. ISHIB2005, an annual gathering of healthcare
professionals from around the world, is jointly sponsored by the
nonprofit ISHIB and ASH (American Society on Hypertension) and is
taking place at the Caribe Hilton Hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico
during July 15-18.
ISHIB (the International Society
on Hypertension in Blacks) is a unique professional medical
membership organization devoted to improving health and life
expectancy of ethnic populations. ISHIB was founded in Atlanta,
Georgia, in 1986 to respond to the problem of high blood pressure
among ethnic populations. Each year, its international
interdisciplinary conference presents advancements in the treatment
and prevention of diseases concomitant to hypertension. In addition
to US conference locations, other sites for the conference have
included Toronto, London, the US Virgin Islands, Kenya, Cameroon and
Brazil.