Diabetes disparities: 做厙TV researchers work with communities at risk
Rick Bhurji was shocked to learn that, at age 47, he had type 2 diabetes.
His next thought was: What did I do wrong?
Ricks daughter, Anjali, noticed that many of their Indo-Canadian friends and family had mysteriously developed diabetes. She figured her fathers diabetes was due to his love of pop and junk food.
For many of us who are South Asians, we internalize and blame ourselves for the diabetes epidemic in our community, but that is really unfair, says Ananya Banerjee, an assistant professor at the University of Torontos Dalla Lana School of Public Health and a researcher with the Temerty Faculty of Medicines Banting & Best Diabetes Centre.
In fact, people from communities of colour across Canada are at higher risk for diabetes. is double in Black communities and triple in South Asian and First Nations communities, compared to white Canadians.
that First Nations children in Manitoba are 25 times more likely to be diagnosed with type 2 diabetes than other children. But disparities in diabetes are about more than ethnicity.
Researchers have found that location, income level, education, mental health, and experiences of racism and trauma can all profoundly impact the development and progression of diabetes.
By looking beyond basic biology, health-care providers are not only identifying which communities are at risk for diabetes, but also what interventions can make a difference.
In health care, we tend to take a one-size-fits-all approach, says Aisha Lofters, a clinician scientist and an associate professor of family and community medicine at the Temerty Faculty of Medicine.
Lofters is also co-leader of which aims to improve the screening and prevention of cancer and chronic illnesses, including diabetes.
In practice, set guidelines and flowsheets dont work for all individuals, explains Lofters.
Rather than wagging the finger at a patient who, for instance, isnt meeting the recommended amount of exercise, the BETTER WISE project works with the patient to set individualized, attainable goals such as going for a 15-minute walk each week.
Banerjee took a similar approach with (SAADAP), providing education and prevention strategies to 80 South Asian teens with a family history of diabetes.
Through this pilot program, about eight in 10 participants reduced their intake of sweets and junk food and encouraged their family members to eat healthier.
Anjali and Rick, for instance, learned recipes for a healthy mango lassi and chickpea salad that have become staples in their home.
Outcomes of tailored diabetes programs are promising but, as obesity management expert and 做厙TV alumnus Sean Wharton explains, they point to larger flaws in Canadas health-care system.
Disparity has come about because of a health-care system that isnt serving people of colour, says Wharton.
Beyond adjusting care to fit individual patient needs, he says some of the most effective ways of treating disparities in diabetes are at the grassroots level, such as in places of worship and community centres.
These are spaces where the people working with the community are not biased against them, and theyre not blaming and shaming them, making them feel unrecognized or discriminated against, explains Wharton.
In an effort to dispel internalized blame or stigma related to diabetes, Banerjee, through SAADAP, highlights the social determinants of health, such as the walkability of neighbourhoods and the burden of precarious employment, and how they affect the participants health.
Those lessons made Anjali realize, Theres no need to feel horrible, and that you caused this, because you didnt.
(FNHSSM) showed that First Nations individuals access primary care at a similar rate to others in the province. However, that care is not reducing complications from type 2 diabetes, such as amputations and kidney failure.
The health system has made it the responsibility of the client with this simplistic idea that if you live healthy, eat healthy and exercise, youre less likely to have type 2 diabetes. We know theres more to it than that, says Lorraine McLeod, associate director of (DIP), a mobile program that First Nations leaders support to provide on-reserve diabetes care and treatment to more than a dozen First Nations communities in Manitoba.
Programs such as the centres DIP, B.C.s and have made significant improvements in diabetes prevention and management by being created by or developed in partnership with First Nations communities.
Since the late 90s in Manitoba, First Nations leaders have been calling for action and collecting the necessary data to address the growing epidemic of diabetes in Indigenous communities.
Oftentimes, research has been led by non-Indigenous researchers who have used their voice and academic lens to analyze Indigenous people, which often leads to continued stigmatization, and upholds the colonial practices and policies that were put in place to assimilate First Nations, M矇tis and Inuit people into Canadian society, says Leona Star, the centres director of research.
As an example of a dataset that accurately identifies First Nations according to their own indicators of well-being, Star points to (RHS), which she says was designed and delivered by First Nations with our cultural framework and code of ethics.
According to Star, RHS data has led to federal funding for multiple Indigenous health initiatives, including diabetes prevention. While Star emphasizes the need for First Nations people to govern their own information and data, known as data sovereignty, she calls for more action.
It is also important to look at the effectiveness and impacts of research findings, says Star. Although significant investments have been made to undertake research around diabetes, the rates of diabetes continue to increase and climb especially amongst First Nations.
While evidence led or co-led by First Nations is available, she says what is lacking are policies and implementation recommendations to address discrimination and disparities in health care.
Wharton says the key question is why researchers and health-care providers arent acting on what they already know.
To address the disparities created by bias, racism and systemic inequalities, he says its time that practitioners embrace the strengths of Indigenous peoples and people of colour, rather than assessing how these patients adhere to a system that wasnt designed for or by them.
We need to shake the foundations of how we help, he says.
This story was originally published in .