Health markers, depressive symptoms, and community deprivation in a type 2 diabetes multidisciplinary care clinic for youth
Carolina M. Bejarano, Sanita Ley, Nisha Krishnan, Sarah Orkin, Nancy A. Crimmins, Lisa Schaaf, Amy S. Shah

TL;DR
This study explores how race, ethnicity, and community deprivation affect health and depressive symptoms in youth with type 2 diabetes.
Contribution
The study identifies racial/ethnic and socioeconomic disparities in metabolic health and depressive symptoms among youth with type 2 diabetes.
Findings
Hispanic/Latino youth had higher liver enzymes compared to non-Hispanic/Latino Black youth at initial visits.
Youth in higher socioeconomic deprivation areas showed improved hemoglobin A1C over time.
Depressive symptoms increased in Black and Hispanic youth but decreased in non-Hispanic White youth.
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes disproportionately affects non-Hispanic/Latino Black and Hispanic/Latino youth. The purpose of this study was to examine whether differences in metabolic risk factors and depressive symptoms exist by race/ethnicity and socioeconomic deprivation and whether these impact clinic attendance and health markers over 1 year in a multidisciplinary type 2 diabetes clinic for youth. This study was a retrospective chart review of 54 youth with type 2 diabetes who had both an initial and follow-up visit. Demographic information, metabolic health markers [body mass index (BMI), hemoglobin A1C, liver enzymes, lipid panel, and urine microalbumin], depressive symptoms, and clinic attendance data were obtained from the medical record. Patient address was geocoded to the census tract level to calculate community socioeconomic deprivation. Liver enzymes (ALT and AST) were significantly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiabetes Management and Education · Diabetes Management and Research · Childhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life
