Latino/Hispanic and African American diabetics in Montgomery County
are enjoying better health thanks to a community-based education
program involving faculty of the College of Agriculture and Natural
Resources. Working in partnership with the Montgomery County
Department of Health and Human Services, community leaders in
predominantly African American neighborhoods, and the Spanish
Catholic Health Center, a nonprofit organization that serves the
Latino population, Dr. Mira
Mehta and Dianne
Miiller are providing these previously underserved
audiences with the information they and their families need to take
control of their diet, the disease, and their lives.
The seeds for this educational effort were sown in 1998, when
Miiller, an Extension educator in Montgomery County, attended a
diabetes presentation at a meeting of the Society for Nutrition
Education, and Mehta, an Extension specialist in the Department of
Nutrition and Food Science, introduced an initiative on diabetes
education to Maryland Extension educators. "Approximately 1.8
million Hispanic Americans and 2.3 million African Americans older
than the age of 20 have diabetes," says Mehta. "Diabetes is to some
extent a preventable disorder that can be managed with diet and
physical activity, and I felt that the uiversity could play a part
in reaching and teaching these medically high-risk
populations."
Miiller agreed. She and her community collaborators developed a
curriculum and taught their first six-hour diabetes education
program for uninsured Hispanic clients in May 1999, repeating the
program eight times since then. Through interactive lectures and
cooking demonstrations using culturally appropriate foods, they
have provided more than 100 low-literacy diabetics with practical
tips and guidelines for dietary fat control and blood glucose
regulation.
Blood tests conducted during the first of three classes and three
months after the final class reveal a mean decline in long-term
blood glucose levels of 1.27 percent. "Given that a 1 percent
increase in these levels is associated with an additional $600 to
$2,000 in per-person health care costs, this figure is extremely
significant," says Miiller.
Buoyed by these results, she and her colleagues piloted a similar
class for African American clientele in early 2001, which they hope
will form the basis of an ongoing program. And, with guidance from
Mehta, Extension educators in several other counties, including
Allegany, Frederick, Prince George's, Somerset, Worcester, and
Wicomico, are forming their own community partnerships to reach
additional at-risk populations.
For more information, contact Terri Kieckhefer
Last updated:
03/23/2006