Impact of Research: Achieving Health Equity for Adults With Diabetes.

Gretchen A Piatt
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It enhanced professional development of ADCES members, led to the development of new and innovative management and treatment options, enabled certified diabetes education specialists to provide personalized management approaches, and supported certified diabetes education specialists working to the extent of their licensures. Over the years, diabetes translational research evolved from health-system-centric patient education, team care, and model care delivery to regional, national, and international approaches that target patients, certified diabetes care and education specialists, providers, practices, health systems, and communities. Indeed, researchers from the University of Michigan CDTR made significant contributions to the science and practice of using nontraditional, complex study designs to evaluate and improve diabetes prevention, management, and self-management support programs; the development and implementation of the empowerment approach to diabetes education; new measurements to assess knowledge, provider attitudes, and patient empowerment; establishment of the cost-effectiveness of diabetes selfmanagement education and support and other novel programs; and the design and evaluation of innovative intervention strategies, tools, and platforms to improve individual and population health. To address the progression of diabetes translational science, in 2020, the CDTRs refocused their programs to provide specialized expertise and resources to raise awareness of, interest in, and successful execution of rigorous translational diabetes research focused on improving health equity for people with and at risk for developing diabetes. Although landmark trials established the scientific basis for diabetes prevention and management and significant progress was made in decreasing the gaps between optimal care and the care delivered in everyday clinical practice, the public health impact of these efforts remains unrealized. The continued disproportionate disease burden that faces health care systems, nationwide and globally, is largely attributable to several factors, including systemic differences in health that are avoidable, unjust, and related to social and economic disadvantage. Glaring disparities persist by race/ethnicity, education, income, and geography in prevalence, morbidity, and mortality from diabetes and other cardiometabolic conditions.1,2 There are steep inverse gradients in diabetes prevalence, complications, and mortality with education and poverty.3,4 Geographic variations are striking, with area-level poverty standing out as the strongest single predictor of being a high-risk county.5 These political, environmental, social, behavioral, and economic factors, often called “social and behavioral determinants of health (SBDOH),: significantly shape individual behavioral risk factors such as dietary patterns, levels of physical activity, medication engagement, and smoking that increase risks of diabetes and its complications.6-8 Most, if not all, SBDOH that lead to disparities are modifiable, including the built environment of a neighborhood. Undeniably, in many cases, a zip code is a stronger predictor of health than DNA. 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In this case, the authors use an emergent design to address issues of health equity and SBDOH by exploring the influences of the neighborhood environment on physical activity for African American adults with type 2 diabetes in a southwest Baltimore 1169691 TDEXXX10.1177/26350106231169691The Science of Diabetes Self-Management and CarePiatt research-article2023","PeriodicalId":75187,"journal":{"name":"The science of diabetes self-management and care","volume":"49 4","pages":"317-318"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The science of diabetes self-management and care","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/26350106231169691","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Since 1977, Diabetes Research and Training Centers (DRTCs) and, more recently, Centers for Diabetes Translational Research (CDTRs) played a foundational role in the nation’s efforts to translate advances in diabetes research into improved outcomes for people with diabetes. With many certified diabetes education specialists playing critical roles in the DRTCs and CDTRs over the years, the impact of diabetes translational research on the Association of Diabetes Care & Education Specialists (ADCES) is significant. It enhanced professional development of ADCES members, led to the development of new and innovative management and treatment options, enabled certified diabetes education specialists to provide personalized management approaches, and supported certified diabetes education specialists working to the extent of their licensures. Over the years, diabetes translational research evolved from health-system-centric patient education, team care, and model care delivery to regional, national, and international approaches that target patients, certified diabetes care and education specialists, providers, practices, health systems, and communities. Indeed, researchers from the University of Michigan CDTR made significant contributions to the science and practice of using nontraditional, complex study designs to evaluate and improve diabetes prevention, management, and self-management support programs; the development and implementation of the empowerment approach to diabetes education; new measurements to assess knowledge, provider attitudes, and patient empowerment; establishment of the cost-effectiveness of diabetes selfmanagement education and support and other novel programs; and the design and evaluation of innovative intervention strategies, tools, and platforms to improve individual and population health. To address the progression of diabetes translational science, in 2020, the CDTRs refocused their programs to provide specialized expertise and resources to raise awareness of, interest in, and successful execution of rigorous translational diabetes research focused on improving health equity for people with and at risk for developing diabetes. Although landmark trials established the scientific basis for diabetes prevention and management and significant progress was made in decreasing the gaps between optimal care and the care delivered in everyday clinical practice, the public health impact of these efforts remains unrealized. The continued disproportionate disease burden that faces health care systems, nationwide and globally, is largely attributable to several factors, including systemic differences in health that are avoidable, unjust, and related to social and economic disadvantage. Glaring disparities persist by race/ethnicity, education, income, and geography in prevalence, morbidity, and mortality from diabetes and other cardiometabolic conditions.1,2 There are steep inverse gradients in diabetes prevalence, complications, and mortality with education and poverty.3,4 Geographic variations are striking, with area-level poverty standing out as the strongest single predictor of being a high-risk county.5 These political, environmental, social, behavioral, and economic factors, often called “social and behavioral determinants of health (SBDOH),: significantly shape individual behavioral risk factors such as dietary patterns, levels of physical activity, medication engagement, and smoking that increase risks of diabetes and its complications.6-8 Most, if not all, SBDOH that lead to disparities are modifiable, including the built environment of a neighborhood. Undeniably, in many cases, a zip code is a stronger predictor of health than DNA. Park et al9 provide one of the most cited and read research articles in The Science of Diabetes Self-Management and Care. [Click this link to access article: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0145721720906082] The 2020 article is an example of the progression of diabetes translational science over the last 5+ years with a movement toward achieving health equity for people with diabetes by addressing SBDOH. In this case, the authors use an emergent design to address issues of health equity and SBDOH by exploring the influences of the neighborhood environment on physical activity for African American adults with type 2 diabetes in a southwest Baltimore 1169691 TDEXXX10.1177/26350106231169691The Science of Diabetes Self-Management and CarePiatt research-article2023
研究的影响:实现成人糖尿病患者的健康平等。
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