Controlling diabetes is more challenging for Hispanics than non-Hispanic whites, suggest the analyses of multiple studies.
Controlling diabetes is more challenging for Hispanics than non-Hispanic whites, suggest the analyses of multiple studies.
According to researchers at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center, 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.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.
'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 study’s lead author.
Kirk said that knowing some minority groups may have higher A1C could impact early treatment and awareness.
In the research, 495 studies were reviewed.
The researchers 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.
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'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.
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The researchers recommend the 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.
The study is published in Diabetes Care.
Source-ANI
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