Diabetes Risk Perception Among Immigrant and Racial/Ethnic Minority Adults in the United States
Author(s) -
Hsueh Loretta,
Peña Juan M.,
Hirsh Adam T.,
de Groot Mary,
Stewart Jesse C.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the diabetes educator
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.829
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1554-6063
pISSN - 0145-7217
DOI - 10.1177/0145721719873640
Subject(s) - prediabetes , ethnic group , immigration , medicine , national health and nutrition examination survey , diabetes mellitus , demography , foreign born , odds ratio , population , gerontology , odds , environmental health , type 2 diabetes , logistic regression , geography , endocrinology , archaeology , sociology , anthropology
Purpose The purpose of the study was to examine associations of immigrant and racial/ethnic status with diabetes risk perception among a population-based sample of US adults without diabetes. Racial/ethnic minorities are at increased risk of developing diabetes. Emerging research shows that immigrant (foreign born) individuals are also at increased risk, but less is understood about risk perception in this group.Methods Respondents were 11,569 adults from the NHANES (2011-2016; National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey) reporting no diabetes or prediabetes. Immigrant status was coded as foreign born or US born and analyses used NHANES racial/ethnic categories: white, black, Mexican American, other Hispanic, Asian, and other/multiracial. Immigrant status and variables comparing each minority group with whites were simultaneously entered into models predicting risk perception (yes/no), adjusting for demographic and diabetes risk factors.Results Being foreign born was associated with decreased odds of perceived risk, while being Mexican American, Asian, and other/multiracial were associated with increased odds of perceived risk.Discussion Foreign-born adults are less likely than US-born adults to report perceived risk for diabetes. Lower diabetes risk perception among immigrants could result in poorer preventative behaviors and later diabetes detection.
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