Shuang Yan1, Xincai Hong1, Haiqiao Yu1, Zhen Yang1, Siying Liu1, Wei Quan1, Jiankai Xu2, Liying Zhu3, Weilun Cheng4, Hong Xiao5, Heather Kitzman-Ulrich6, Mark J DeHaven7. 1. 4th Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University, Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Harbin, Heilongjiang Province, China. 2. Harbin Medical University, College of Bio-informatics Science and Technology, Harbin, Heilongjiang Province, China. 3. 4th Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University, Department of Infectious Diseases, Harbin, Heilongjiang Province, China. 4. Harbin Medical University, Harbin, Heilongjiang Province, China. 5. University of Texas Southwestern Clinically Affiliated Physicians, Dallas, TX. 6. University of North Texas, Health Science Center, Texas Prevention Institute, Fort Worth, TX. 7. University of North Carolina at Charlotte, College of Health and Human Services, Academy for Research on Community Health, Engagement, and Services (ARCHES), Charlotte, NC.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: In China's Nong Zhuan Fei (NZF) communities, farmers living in rural villages are uprooted and moved into newly constructed urban apartments when the government purchases their land for residential and commercial development. With their relocation from a traditional rural setting to a modern urban setting, residents of NZF communities face lifestyle-based risk factors for diabetes and other chronic diseases. We reported estimates of diabetes prevalence, risk factors, and health-related quality of life among adult Chinese NZF rural-to-urban migrants. METHODS: We conducted a descriptive cross-sectional study through a U.S.-China partnership with an NZF community of 3,184 residents. Health and disease history, risk factors, and sociodemographic information were collected by questionnaire. Participants completed a 24-hour diet recall, three-day physical activity recall, a health-related quality of life Short-Form 36 (SF-36) health survey, the Beck Depression Inventory, and fasting blood glucose tests. RESULTS: We gathered complete data from 1,150 of 1,772 eligible participants. The prevalence of diabetes was 11.6% (95% confidence interval 9.8, 13.6). Diabetes risk increased significantly with age, income, obesity, and hypertension. Based on SF-36 scores, residents aged ≥60 years with diabetes reported significantly greater physical (47.7 v. 70.2, p=0.001) and emotional (76.9 vs. 89.7, p=0.006) limitations, more bodily pain (79.7 vs. 84.9, p=0.021), and worse overall physical health (67.6 vs. 76.0, p=0.015) than those without diabetes. CONCLUSION: The Chinese government hopes to integrate an additional 250 million people into city living by 2025. As the NZF population increases, so may the prevalence of diabetes associated with the change from a rural to an urban lifestyle. Action is needed now by public health professionals to prevent a possible diabetes crisis in NZF communities in the future.
OBJECTIVE: In China's Nong Zhuan Fei (NZF) communities, farmers living in rural villages are uprooted and moved into newly constructed urban apartments when the government purchases their land for residential and commercial development. With their relocation from a traditional rural setting to a modern urban setting, residents of NZF communities face lifestyle-based risk factors for diabetes and other chronic diseases. We reported estimates of diabetes prevalence, risk factors, and health-related quality of life among adult Chinese NZF rural-to-urban migrants. METHODS: We conducted a descriptive cross-sectional study through a U.S.-China partnership with an NZF community of 3,184 residents. Health and disease history, risk factors, and sociodemographic information were collected by questionnaire. Participants completed a 24-hour diet recall, three-day physical activity recall, a health-related quality of life Short-Form 36 (SF-36) health survey, the Beck Depression Inventory, and fasting blood glucose tests. RESULTS: We gathered complete data from 1,150 of 1,772 eligible participants. The prevalence of diabetes was 11.6% (95% confidence interval 9.8, 13.6). Diabetes risk increased significantly with age, income, obesity, and hypertension. Based on SF-36 scores, residents aged ≥60 years with diabetes reported significantly greater physical (47.7 v. 70.2, p=0.001) and emotional (76.9 vs. 89.7, p=0.006) limitations, more bodily pain (79.7 vs. 84.9, p=0.021), and worse overall physical health (67.6 vs. 76.0, p=0.015) than those without diabetes. CONCLUSION: The Chinese government hopes to integrate an additional 250 million people into city living by 2025. As the NZF population increases, so may the prevalence of diabetes associated with the change from a rural to an urban lifestyle. Action is needed now by public health professionals to prevent a possible diabetes crisis in NZF communities in the future.
Authors: J S Rumsfeld; S MaWhinney; M McCarthy; A L Shroyer; C B VillaNueva; M O'Brien; T E Moritz; W G Henderson; F L Grover; G K Sethi; K E Hammermeister Journal: JAMA Date: 1999-04-14 Impact factor: 56.272
Authors: A L Stewart; S Greenfield; R D Hays; K Wells; W H Rogers; S D Berry; E A McGlynn; J E Ware Journal: JAMA Date: 1989-08-18 Impact factor: 56.272