Literature has found Afro-Caribbeans with diabetes have a negative perception of medical professionals. Using a cross-sectional design, Afro-Caribbeans with type 2 diabetes were recruited across 7 churches to determine whether shared knowledge and beliefs about diabetes screening and complications exist and whether they would attend a workshop at their church.https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/archivedposters/1100/thumbnail.jp
Diabetes is becoming a common disease among indigenous populations in Guatemala. They perceive diabe...
Diabetes is increasingly recognized as a serious, worldwide public health concern, due to its preval...
Purpose To measure the prevalence of diabetes mellitus among Haitian Americans Afro-Caribbeans liv...
In the U.S., individuals of Afro-Caribbean and Latino descent are two to three times more likely to ...
Background & Aims: The International Diabetes Federation (IDF) estimated that over 382 million peopl...
Background: Development of effective, culturally-tailored interventions to address excess risk of ty...
Type II diabetes is a significant problem in the United States that had affected almost 10% of the A...
Background: Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) continues to disproportionately affect African Americans...
INTRODUCTION: This study was designed to document the level of awareness and risk for diabetes type ...
Illness perceptions, which are likely influenced by patients' cultural contexts, are associated with...
African American men are more likely to have diagnosed or undiagnosed diabetes than non-Hispanic Whi...
Abdul-Razak Abubakari,1 Martyn C Jones,2 William Lauder,3 Alison Kirk,4 John Anderson,5 Devasenan De...
Purpose: In the United States one in six Asian Indians (AI) is diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and th...
Purpose: To explore the barriers to diabetes management among West African immigrants living in Rhod...
Purpose: The purpose of the study was to pilot test the effectiveness of a diabetes self-management ...
Diabetes is becoming a common disease among indigenous populations in Guatemala. They perceive diabe...
Diabetes is increasingly recognized as a serious, worldwide public health concern, due to its preval...
Purpose To measure the prevalence of diabetes mellitus among Haitian Americans Afro-Caribbeans liv...
In the U.S., individuals of Afro-Caribbean and Latino descent are two to three times more likely to ...
Background & Aims: The International Diabetes Federation (IDF) estimated that over 382 million peopl...
Background: Development of effective, culturally-tailored interventions to address excess risk of ty...
Type II diabetes is a significant problem in the United States that had affected almost 10% of the A...
Background: Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) continues to disproportionately affect African Americans...
INTRODUCTION: This study was designed to document the level of awareness and risk for diabetes type ...
Illness perceptions, which are likely influenced by patients' cultural contexts, are associated with...
African American men are more likely to have diagnosed or undiagnosed diabetes than non-Hispanic Whi...
Abdul-Razak Abubakari,1 Martyn C Jones,2 William Lauder,3 Alison Kirk,4 John Anderson,5 Devasenan De...
Purpose: In the United States one in six Asian Indians (AI) is diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and th...
Purpose: To explore the barriers to diabetes management among West African immigrants living in Rhod...
Purpose: The purpose of the study was to pilot test the effectiveness of a diabetes self-management ...
Diabetes is becoming a common disease among indigenous populations in Guatemala. They perceive diabe...
Diabetes is increasingly recognized as a serious, worldwide public health concern, due to its preval...
Purpose To measure the prevalence of diabetes mellitus among Haitian Americans Afro-Caribbeans liv...