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Starr County, Texas, sits on the Texas-Mexico border along the banks of the Rio Grande River. Populated largely by Mexican Americans, it is a rural county where some of the residents live in colonias, unincorporated areas with no city services. The county seat, Rio Grande City, is home to approximately 15,000 people. Scratch the surface and Starr County has one surprising distinguishing feature: one of the highest prevalence rates of type 2 diabetes in the entire country, and the highest diabetes death rate in Texas. Type 2 diabetes is now being designated a world-wide epidemic, and increasing prevalence rates in the United States are causing great concern. According to Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. Thompson, "With 16 million diabetics and counting, diabetes is growing at an alarming rate in America." The U.S. saw a 6% jump in diabetes rates in 1999 alone. Type 2 diabetes, which accounts for 90-95% of diabetes cases, has its onset during adulthood. Researchers believe that its occurrence can be accounted for by genetics less than half of the time. The rest of the cases are likely due to individual lifestyles. Starr County is one of a handful of areas where diabetes rates are unaccountably high. A full 50% of the adults over the age of 35 in Starr County either have diabetes themselves or have a first-degree relative with the disease, which means they are at very high risk of getting it themselves. Geneticists from The University of Texas at Houston School of Public Health have been working in Starr County for decades trying to determine why the diabetes rate is so elevated there. Exploring Intervention In 1988, Dr. Sharon Brown, then a professor of nursing at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, got involved. Brown wanted to find a way to help the residents of Starr County manage their diabetes with an intervention program that would provide education and support. Through a series of small grants from the State of Texas and the National Institutes of Health, she and her researchers began to assess the community to see what was needed. In 1993, the National Institutes of Health requested proposals for diabetes projects focused on interventions targeting minority communities. Brown and her team of UT Houston researchers were awarded a grant of more than $1 million at that point, the largest in UT Houston School of Nursing history to improve the health of Mexican American residents of Starr County. The grant funded the study from 1994-98, and a subsequent grant funded a follow-up study from 1999-2004. Dr. Sharon Brown (right), associate vice president of research at The University of Texas at Austin, has been helping residents of Starr County manage their diabetes since 1988. Sharon Brown, now associate vice president of research at The University of Texas at Austin, says that from the beginning, "Our intent has been to address the cultural needs of Mexican Americans with diabetes, because to this day in many communities around the U.S., Mexican Americans are still being misadvised in terms of what they need to do to manage their condition on a day-to-day basis." She says that intervention in Mexican American communities has been slow because of the prevailing stereotype that Mexican Americans will not follow medical advice. Often there is no access to adequate medical care, and advice about the disease in some cases uninformed comes from their family and other people with diabetes. Brown"s study is "an attempt to teach them how to take proper care of their diabetes themselves." The first phase of the study created an intensive, year-long program focused around education and social support from family and friends. The current second phase is testing a refined version of the intervention in an attempt to create an efficient, cost-effective strategy that can be integrated in medical care sites, such as community clinics. In both phases, participants are between the ages of 35 and 70 years old. They are selected from a research database of known diabetics in the community that was developed by the UT Houston researchers, and willing participants are required to attend intervention classes with a spouse or first-degree relative. Participants and their family members become part of a small group that works for the duration of the study with intervention teams made up of bilingual Mexican American nurses, dietitians, and community workers. Helping from Within the Community Sharon Brown received her Ph.D. in nursing from The University of Texas at Austin in 1987 while serving as an assistant professor of nursing at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. In 1995 she moved to Austin to become associate dean of research and the James R. Dougherty, Jr. Centennial Professor for the School of Nursing. From the beginning of her research in Starr County, Brown recognized that she would be entering the community as an outsider. But she didn"t want to create an intervention program where people arrived from elsewhere and tried to influence a community distant from their own. All intervention team members are Mexican American, bilingual residents of the border community. Most of the instructors are full-time employees elsewhere and work on the intervention as a second job in the evenings. The intervention team members in Starr County are University of Texas employees, but they are also Starr County residents. When the program was first started in 1994, they came to Houston for a week-long training program in diabetes care. Over the years Brown herself has been involved in the ongoing training of the instructors and data collectors, and also in providing health advice for study participants. But she has resisted the urge to send nurses and dietitians from Houston or Austin to do the work, relying instead on professionals from the border area. Alexandra Garcia (right), a Ph.D. student in the School of Nursing at The University of Texas at Austin, has been involved with the Starr County diabetes study during her entire doctoral program. For nursing students at The University of Texas at Austin, the program has provided a chance to see how an intervention program works first-hand. Undergraduate students and summer research interns have visited Starr County as part of the School of Nursing community health program or as part of some of the research training grants that the School has received. While in Starr County, students have observed intervention and data collection sessions, toured the Texas-Mexico border area, including the colonias where the diabetes study draws some of its participants, and talked to the study"s nurses, dieticians, community workers, research office staff and participants about diabetes health issues. Although there is a research field office in Rio Grande City, interventions are held in churches, schools and day care centers throughout the community. Brown says they want to "take the program to the participants." This is a significant opportunity for the residents of Starr County, because across the country only 10% of people with diabetes have access to, or can afford, diabetes self-management education programs. Class size is limited to 16, with 8 diabetics and 8 support people. Alexandra Garcia, a Ph.D. student in nursing at The University of Texas at Austin who has been involved with the study during her entire doctoral program, notes that the classes can become a social event. Members of the group get to know one another and interact frequently among themselves and with the intervention team. Class topics range from teaching participants how to take their medications to learning how blood sugars react to various things such as exercise, stress, medicines, and foods. Participants are taken on field trips to the local grocery store, given cooking demonstrations and taught how to introduce new foods with less fat and more fiber into their diets, as well as how to modify their favorite recipes to make them more healthy. The focus is on helping participants to integrate diabetes care into their everyday lives and to do so in a way that they can sustain. In addition to information, participants are given free monitors to help them keep track of their blood sugar levels and free lab work, essential elements of diabetes care that are sometimes unaffordable for patients. The grant money covers these services, and monitor companies have often donated their equipment. The program does not provide medications, but it does help participants to fill out paperwork for other programs that offer free supplies and medicine. The intent is to make the diabetes program as comprehensive as possible, giving participants what they need to improve their means of living with the condition. Seeing Results And it is working. The 1994-98 phase of the study included 502 participants, and results indicate that the study had a significant impact on improving people"s diabetes control. Blood sugar levels, which in this community were very high, were brought down significantly. Even more important was a reduction in their glycosylated hemoglobin levels, a measure of what blood sugar levels have been over the past two to three months and a more stable indicator of progress. Other research has shown that for every half percentage point decrease in glycosylated hemoglobin, the risk of complications from diabetes is reduced 35-50%. The Starr County intervention achieved a 1.4 percentage point difference between the treatment group and the comparison group at 6 months. Juan Treviç±o, a dietician from Starr County, provides nutrition education services for participants of the diabetes study at a local church in Rio Grande City. Brown admits that there are some complexities in measuring the success of this program. Most diabetes research has been done on non-Hispanics and the results don"t account for the differences that race can present. In the population being studied

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