Living well with diabetes: Evaluation of a pilot program to promote diabetes prevention and self-management in a medically underserved community

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Abstract

A substantial disparity exists in the prevalence and effective selfmanagement of diabetes among African Americans in the United States. Community-level programs have the potential to affect selfefficacy and may be helpful in overcoming common barriers to selfmanagement. The Neighborhood Health Talker Program used community members trained as cultural health brokers to engage their communities in conversations about "living diabetes well." Program evaluators used mixed methods to analyze post-conversation surveys and Health Talker field notes. These indicated an increase in diabetesrelated knowledge and increased confidence among conversation participants. Conversations included discussion of barriers and facilitators to lifestyle changes and effective self-management that are frequently overlooked in a clinical setting.

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Cadzow, R. B., Vest, B. M., Craig, M., Rowe, J. S., & Kahn, L. S. (2014). Living well with diabetes: Evaluation of a pilot program to promote diabetes prevention and self-management in a medically underserved community. Diabetes Spectrum, 27(4), 246–255. https://doi.org/10.2337/diaspect.27.4.246

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