4 research outputs found

    A Community-centered Approach to Diabetes in East Harlem

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    OBJECTIVE: Residents of East Harlem, an impoverished, non-white community in New York city (NYC), have up to 5 times the mortality and complication rates of diabetes compared with NYC residents overall. To determine potentially remediable problems underlying this condition, a community-based collaboration of health providers, community advocates, and researchers, surveyed East Harlem residents with diabetes to assess their knowledge, behaviors, barriers to care, and actions taken in response to barriers. DESIGN: Telephone interviews. SETTING: The 3 hospitals and 2 community clinics serving East Harlem. PARTICIPANTS: Nine hundred thirty-nine of the 1,423 persons (66%) with diabetes identified from these 5 healthcare sites with 2 or more ambulatory visits for diabetes during 1998 who lived in East Harlem. RESULTS: While most respondents (90%) said they know how to take their medicines, between 19% and 39% do not understand other aspects of their diabetes management. Many limit their diabetes care due to concerns about money (16% to 40%), and other barriers, such as language and transportation (19% to 22%). In multivariate analyses, Latinos (relative risk [RR] = 0.77; 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 0.63 to 0.91) and those who do not keep a diabetic diet due to concerns about money (RR = 0.85; 95% CI 0.70 to 0.99) had poorer health status. CONCLUSIONS: A community-based coalition was able to come together, identify areas of concern in diabetes care and assess the needs of adults with diabetes residing and obtaining care in East Harlem. The coalition found that even among those with access to care there remain significant financial barriers to good diabetes care, and a need to address and optimize how individuals with diabetes manage their disease

    Discrimination and Hate Crimes in the Context of Neighborhood Poverty and Stressors Among HIV-Positive African-American Men Who Have Sex with Men

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    In a sample of HIV-positive African-American men who have sex with men (MSM), we examined neighborhood factors that may contextualize perceived discrimination from three intersecting stigmatized characteristics: race, HIV status, and sexual orientation. HIV-positive African-American MSM (NĀ =Ā 162, mean ageĀ =Ā 44, SDĀ =Ā 8) provided information on neighborhood-related stressors and discrimination experiences related to being Black, HIV-positive, or perceived as gay. Residential ZIP codes and US Census data were used to determine neighborhood poverty rates. Regressions, controlling for socio-demographics, indicated that (1) higher neighborhood poverty was significantly related to more frequent experiences with hate crimes (Gay-related: bĀ =Ā 1.15, SEĀ =Ā .43, pĀ <Ā .008); and (2) higher neighborhood-related stressors were significantly related to more frequent discrimination (Black-related: bĀ =Ā .91, SEĀ =Ā .28, pĀ =Ā .001; gay-related: bĀ =Ā .71, SEĀ =Ā .29, pĀ =Ā .01; and HIV-related: bĀ =Ā .65, SEĀ =Ā .28, pĀ =Ā .02) and hate crimes (Gay-related: bĀ =Ā .48, SEĀ =Ā .13, pĀ =Ā .001; and Black-related: bĀ =Ā .28, SEĀ =Ā .14, pĀ =Ā .04). For HIV-positive African-American MSM, higher neighborhood poverty and related stressors are associated with experiencing more discrimination and hate crimes. Interventions for this group should promote individual- and neighborhood-level socioeconomic empowerment and stigma reduction
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