Tammie Choi |
Type 2 diabetes affects 80 per
cent of Chinese Australians aged over 60, significantly higher than the general
population, but many don’t access health management programs due to cultural reasons.
Monash dietitian researcher and
lead investigator, Ms Tammie Choi, said lifestyle
factors such as diet and exercise could reduce the disease’s impact on
individuals and the healthcare system, pointing to a need for a structured diabetes education
program for this group.
“Currently there is a lack of culturally appropriate
diabetes education for Chinese Australians to support them manage their blood
sugar levels.”
To address this, the pilot
project, ‘不再慌糖講座
Not Scared of Sugar’ will focus on Chinese Australians currently missing
out on structured diabetes education services.
Studies have shown that Chinese Australians don’t like the
translated diabetes care model and miss out on health professionals’ support
and care.
“They tend to rely on
unstructured and potentially misleading diabetes management information and
many of my Chinese patients expressed feeling lost and overwhelmed,” said Ms
Choi.
After being diagnosed with type 2 diabetes a few years ago,
a Hong Kong Melbourne couple attended translated consultations with a diabetes
educator and a dietitian.
“The individual consultations with professionals were good
but we’re not used to being at the centre of attention so we felt very
uncomfortable and didn’t return to the review appointments,” said Mr Lee.
Ms Choi said the Not Scared of Sugar pilot project
will enable Chinese Australians with diabetes to live well every day by
providing culturally-tailored diabetes education programs in a format that
matches their expectations while measuring its effectiveness.
“Through this study we hope to use the diabetes education
program as a forum to reconnect the affected Chinese people with health
services and support them better in their diabetes self-management.”
Chair of the ADEA
Diabetes Research Foundation Council, Professor Trisha Dunning, said the study would
lead to significant health benefits.
“This culturally
tailored Chinese diabetes education program has the potential to improve
clinical outcomes for participants and has implications for other populations
in Australia,” said Professor Dunning.
The ADEA Diabetes Research Foundation are funding three
universities in Australia and their partners to conduct research projects that
help Australians with diabetes to live well every day.
Watch a video about Tammie's project HERE.
Watch a video about Tammie's project HERE.
Ms Choi's project will be undertaken in partnership with Carrington Health, Box Hill.
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