Authors: Palmas W, Teresi JA, Findley S, Mejia M, Batista M, Kong J, Silver S, Luchsinger JA, Carrasquillo O.
Hispanics in the USA are affected by the diabetes epidemic disproportionately, and they consistently have lower access to care, poorer control of the disease and higher risk of complications. This study evaluates whether a community health worker (CHW) intervention may improve clinically relevant markers of diabetes care in adult underserved Hispanics. The Northern Manhattan Diabetes Community Outreach Project (NOCHOP) is a two-armed randomised controlled trial to be performed as a community-based participatory research study performed in a Primary Care Setting in Northern Manhattan (New York City). All participants will provide informed consent; the study protocol has been approved by the Institutional Review Board of Columbia University Medical Center. CHW interventions hold great promise in improving the well-being of minority populations who suffer from diabetes mellitus. The NOCHOP study will provide valuable information about the efficacy of those interventions vis-à-vis clinically relevant end points and will inform policy makers through a detailed characterisation of the programme and its effects.
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Resource Topic: Behavior Change and Communication, Chronic conditions, Community Health Workers/Volunteers, Minority Population, Program Design
Resource Type: Journal articles, Research
Year: 2012
Region: North America (U.S. and Canada)
Country: United States of America
Publisher May Restrict Access: No
