AI Article Synopsis

  • A 2019 nationwide survey in Brazil found that over half (52.1%) of participants with diabetes had never had their feet examined by a healthcare professional, highlighting a significant lack of preventive care.
  • Ethnic disparities were evident, with a higher percentage of Black individuals (55.3%) reporting never having had their feet examined compared to White individuals (48.2%). Factors such as age, education level, alcohol consumption, health status, and the length of diabetes diagnosis were associated with this negligence.
  • The study concludes that reinforcing primary healthcare services could help address the systemic racism affecting Black Brazilians in access to diabetes care and enhance preventive health measures.

Article Abstract

Objective: To assess the absence of diabetic foot examination in Brazil and how ethnicity affected this outcome.

Design: This is an analysis of a nationwide survey held in Brazil in 2019. Participants with diabetes and that were 15 years of age or older were eligible for inclusion in the analysis. Adjusted Poisson regression with robust variance was used to calculate prevalence ratios (PRs) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) of never having had the foot examined, with separate models according to ethnicity. Stata 14.2 was used for all calculations.

Results: We included 6216 individuals with diabetes; 52.1% (95%CI: 50.0%-54.2%) reported never having had their feet examined by a health care professional and 61% self-declared as Black (Black and Brown [Brazilian mixed race]). A higher frequency of negligence was observed among Black individuals (55.3%; 52.5%-58.1%) than among White individuals (48.2%; 45.0%-51.5%). Negligence was higher between 15- to 39-year-old participants (PR = 1.34, 1.14-1.57), lower educational level (PR = 1.37, 1.13-1.65), higher alcohol consumption (PR = 1.18, 1.06-1.31), fair health status (PR = 1.11, 1.01-1.21), and diabetes diagnosis of up to 10 years (PR = 1.42, 1.28-1.57). Among Blacks, tobacco use and other factors increased the frequency of the outcome, whereas participation in the Brazilian Unified Health System primary care program was a protection factor (P<.05).

Conclusion: Black Brazilians with diabetes had higher negligence of foot examination by health care professionals. Strengthening primary care would help mitigate systemic racism in Brazil.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11500640PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.18865/EthnDis-2023-50DOI Listing

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