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Effective primary care management of type 2 diabetes for indigenous populations: A systematic review. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Indigenous peoples in wealthy countries face higher rates of Type 2 Diabetes due to socioeconomic challenges and healthcare access issues.
  • This systematic review focuses on effective primary care management strategies for Indigenous adults with Type 2 Diabetes across Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the U.S., primarily measuring changes in glycated hemoglobin levels along with secondary outcomes like hospital admissions and treatment compliance.
  • Seven studies were analyzed, revealing seven key components for successful interventions, including reducing healthcare barriers, involving community consultation, adapting to changing needs, utilizing community health workers, promoting Indigenous empowerment, and the effectiveness of short, group-based programs.

Article Abstract

Background: Indigenous peoples in high income countries are disproportionately affected by Type 2 Diabetes. Socioeconomic disadvantages and inadequate access to appropriate healthcare are important contributors.

Objectives: This systematic review investigates effective designs of primary care management of Type 2 Diabetes for Indigenous adults in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United States. Primary outcome was change in mean glycated haemoglobin. Secondary outcomes were diabetes-related hospital admission rates, treatment compliance, and change in weight or Body Mass Index.

Methods: Included studies were critically appraised using Joanna Briggs Institute appraisal checklists. A mixed-method systematic review was undertaken. Quantitative findings were compared by narrative synthesis, meta-aggregation of qualitative factors was performed.

Results: Seven studies were included. Three reported statistically significant reductions in means HbA1c following their intervention. Seven components of effective interventions were identified. These were: a need to reduce health system barriers to facilitate access to primary care (which the other six components work towards), an essential role for Indigenous community consultation in intervention planning and implementation, a need for primary care programs to account for and adapt to changes with time in barriers to primary care posed by the health system and community members, the key role of community-based health workers, Indigenous empowerment to facilitate community and self-management, benefit of short-intensive programs, and benefit of group-based programs.

Conclusions: This study synthesises a decade of data from communities with a high burden of Type 2 Diabetes and limited research regarding health system approaches to improve diabetes-related outcomes. Policymakers should consider applying the seven identified components of effective primary care interventions when designing primary care approaches to mitigate the impact of Type 2 Diabetes in Indigenous populations. More robust and culturally appropriate studies of Type 2 Diabetes management in Indigenous groups are needed.

Trail Registration: Registered with PROSPERO (02/04/2021: CRD42021240098).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9648771PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0276396PLOS

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