The effects of a community-based, culturally tailored diabetes prevention intervention for high-risk adults of Mexican descent.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalThe Diabetes educator
Year 2014
PURPOSE: This article reports the results of a community-based, culturally tailored diabetes prevention program for overweight Mexican American adults on weight loss, waist circumference, diet and physical activity self-efficacy, and diet behaviors. METHODS: The intervention used content from the Diabetes Prevention Program but culturally tailored the delivery methods into a community-based program for Spanish-speaking adults of Mexican descent. The design was a randomized controlled trial (N = 58) comparing the effects of a 5-month educational intervention with an attention control group. The primary study outcome was weight loss. Secondary outcomes included change in waist circumference, body mass index, diet self-efficacy, and physical activity self-efficacy. RESULTS: There were significant intervention effects for weight, waist circumference, body mass index, and diet self-efficacy, with the intervention group doing better than the control group. These effects did not change over time. CONCLUSIONS: Findings support the conclusion that a community-based, culturally tailored intervention is effective in reducing diabetes risk factors in a 5-month program. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)
Epistemonikos ID: 53dbd04555bded2e108ce8301f6f3a83a6574151
First added on: May 08, 2022