Literature DB >> 27098819

Improving management of type 2 diabetes in South Asian patients: a systematic review of intervention studies.

N Bhurji1, J Javer2, D Gasevic1, N A Khan3.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Optimal control of type 2 diabetes is challenging in many patient populations including in South Asian patients. We systematically reviewed studies on the effect of diabetes management interventions targeted at South Asian patients with type 2 diabetes on glycaemic control.
DESIGN: Systematic review of MEDLINE, EMBASE and CINAHL databases for randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and pre-post-test studies (January 1990 to February 2014). Studies were stratified by where interventions were conducted (South Asia vs Western countries). PARTICIPANTS: Patients originating from Pakistan, Bangladesh or India with type 2 diabetes. PRIMARY OUTCOME: Change in glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c). Secondary end points included change in blood pressure, lipid levels, anthropomorphics and knowledge.
RESULTS: 23 studies (15 RCTs) met criteria for analysis with 7 from Western countries (n=2532) and 16 from South Asia (n=1081). Interventions in Western countries included translated diabetes education, additional clinical care, written materials, visual aids, and bilingual community-based peers and/or health professionals. Interventions conducted in South Asia included yoga, meditation or exercise, community-based peers, health professionals and dietary education (cooking exercises). Among RCTs in India (5 trials; n=390), 4 demonstrated significant reductions in HbA1c in the intervention group compared with usual care (yoga and exercise interventions). Among the 4 RCTs conducted in Europe (n=2161), only 1 study, an education intervention of 113 patients, reported a significant reduction in HbA1c with the intervention. Lipids, blood pressure and knowledge improved in both groups with studies from India more often reporting reductions in body mass index and waist circumference.
CONCLUSIONS: Overall, there was little improvement in HbA1c level in diabetes management interventions targeted at South Asians living in Europe compared with usual care, although other outcomes did improve. The smaller studies in India demonstrated significant improvements in glycaemic and other end points. Novel strategies are needed to improve glycaemic control in South Asians living outside of India. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/

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Keywords:  HEALTH SERVICES ADMINISTRATION & MANAGEMENT

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27098819      PMCID: PMC4838706          DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008986

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ Open        ISSN: 2044-6055            Impact factor:   2.692


To the best of our knowledge, this is the first systematic review of the efficacy of diabetes management (multiple components) interventions focused on South Asian patients. Evidence is stratified by location of study, thereby allowing the examination of chronic diabetes management interventions on South Asians living in India and immigrant South Asian patients living in Western countries. Included a systematic review of yoga interventions for diabetes management in South Asian patients with diabetes. Given the significant heterogeneity in interventions and outcome results, a pooled analysis was not possible. Medication adherence was not addressed in almost all of the trials.

Introduction

South Asian persons originating from Pakistan, Bangladesh or India experience a 50% higher risk of developing type 2 diabetes mellitus compared with other populations, irrespective of whether they live in South Asia or Western countries.1 2 This high global incidence of type 2 diabetes has significant ramifications on this population as type 2 diabetes is associated with a 2–4 times increased risk of myocardial infarction and stroke compared with those without diabetes. In Canada, age-adjusted standardised mortality is also three times higher in South Asian patients with diabetes compared with South Asian patients without diabetes.1 Robust clinical trial evidence demonstrates that reducing glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c), blood pressure and fasting blood lipids, using lifestyle modification and diabetes treatment, reduces total mortality by 46%, cardiovascular death by 57% and non-fatal cardiovascular events by 59%.3 4 As such, multiple national guideline bodies and diabetes programmes recommend diabetes education and behaviour modification to promote diet, exercise and diabetes medication adherence to achieve these critical reductions in HbA1c, blood pressure and lipids. Despite guidelines and diabetes programmes to improve diabetes management, diabetes control remains suboptimal in many populations including South Asians.5 6 A study in Canada reports that 55% of South Asian patients are above recommended HbA1c targets, 36% above blood pressure targets and 58% are above lipid-level targets for diabetes.5 Further, South Asian patients are 24% less likely to achieve recommended targets for diabetes than the general population and also less likely to exercise or follow a healthy diet.6 7 This large gap in diabetes control in South Asians patients propelled the development of novel and culturally adapted diabetes management strategies in this group. Whether such strategies improve diabetes control in South Asian patients remains unclear. Therefore, we conducted a systematic review of all published randomised controlled trials (RCT) and prospective pre-post-test observational studies evaluating lifestyle or educational interventions compared with usual care or control in South Asian patients with type 2 diabetes on change in HbA1c. We also collected data on change in blood pressure, lipid levels, anthropometric measures and diabetes knowledge. We evaluated potential differences in change in HbA1c by intervention and region of study (South Asia vs Western countries).

Methods

The methods were in accordance with the PRISMA checklist for systematic reviews of intervention trials.

Data sources

We performed a systematic review of intervention studies for type 2 diabetes management in South Asian patients. With the help of a medical librarian, we reviewed MEDLINE, EMBASE and CINAHL databases for articles published between 1 January 1990 and 1 February 2014. The search terms included India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, South Asian, East Indian, diabetes mellitus (type 2), manage, review, management, intervention, disease management, patient compliance, cultural characteristic, attitudes to health, cultural perception, outcomes, access to care and lifestyle changes (see online supplementary file for the full electronic search strategy). Searches were not limited by language. All articles were combined into a single list, and duplicates were excluded, resulting in 271 abstracts for review (see figure 1).
Figure 1

Study flow.

Study flow.

Study selection

Two authors reviewed all abstracts (NB and JJ; see figure 1). Studies were included if they were: conducted with adult patients identified as South Asian (originating from India, Pakistan or Bangladesh); randomised control trials or pre-post study designs, included any educational or lifestyle intervention for type 2 diabetes management and if they reported on any one of the outcomes of interest: absolute changes in HbA1c (primary outcome of interest), fasting blood glucose, blood pressure, weight, body mass index (BMI), waist circumference (WC), lipid levels and knowledge. We excluded studies where participants were paediatric populations, or had gestational diabetes, prediabetes or type 1 diabetes. We also excluded reviews, cross-sectional, case–control, case series studies as well as drug efficacy studies (including complementary, eg, Ayurvedic medicines). We did not include studies from other South Asian countries as there was a significant paucity of studies in those groups.

Study quality

All full-text studies that met the selection criteria were evaluated for bias, and were appraised on the basis of a component approach from the Cochrane Review Groups and Jadad score for reporting RCTs.8 9 These methodological quality measures are listed in table 3. Given the nature of the interventions, blinding of participants and caregivers was not possible. We evaluated separately the subgroup of higher quality RCTs that specified appropriate methods or type of randomisation, described losses to follow-up and intention-to-treat analysis.
Table 3

Quality appraisal of trials

Author, yearRandomisedRandomisation methodType of randomisationAllocation concealmentBlindingPer cent Lost to follow-upITT
MiddelkoopRCTDate of birthNSNSNoneNSNS
Shenoy, 2009RCTNSNSNSNone3NS
Shenoy, 2010RCTNSNSNSNoneNSYes
ShantakumariRandomised parallel studyNSNSNSNoneNSNS
VaishaliRCTNSBlockSealed opaque envelopesNone5.3NS
HawthorneRCTRandom number tablesNSSealed envelopesNone6.5No
AdepuRCTNSNSNSNone14.3No
BaradaranRCTNSMinimisationNSNone37.3No
GhoshRCTNSNSNSNoneYesNS
MalathyRCTNSNSNSNoneNoneYes
HameedRCTRandom number tablesNSNSNoneYesYes
ShettyRCTRandom number tablesNSNSNoneNSNo
O’HareCluster RCTNoneNSNSNone10.0No
BellaryCluster RCTSimpleSimpleNSNS10.8Yes
VyasCluster RCTNSBy GP practice4NSNS44No
DeSouza, 2003, 2004Pretest post-testConvenience samplingNANANoneNSYes
Balagopal, 2008Pretest post-testNANANANoneYes: refusalsYes
Balagopal, 2012Pretest post-testNANANANoneYes: migration and refusalsYes
MirsaPretest post-testNANANANoneNSYes
ChoudhuryPretest post-testNANANANone8.9No
PandePretest post-testNANANANoneNSNS
SinghPretest post-testNANANANSNSNS
Madanmohan, 2012Pretest post-testNANANANS<1Yes

ITT, intention-to-treat; NA, not applicable; NS, not specified; RCT, randomised controlled trial.

Data extraction

Data extraction was completed in duplicate (NB and JJ). Any discrepancies were discussed and consensus achieved (NB, JJ and NAK). Since the outcomes and interventions of the study were clinically heterogeneous, no quantitative data synthesis was performed. Systematic review of the studies was a priori stratified by study location (South Asian countries vs Western countries) as these healthcare delivery systems, and potentially patient populations, were expected to be significantly different. Interventions were also described by type: education, exercise, dietary or mixed studies (defined as a combination of at least two of the aforementioned intervention types). Change in HbA1c from baseline (delta HbA1c) was the primary outcome for this review and was reported, where data were available, as the difference in delta HbA1c between the intervention and control groups. Findings from duplicate publications were only included once.

Results

From a review of 274 articles, 23 studies (n=3613) were included in this final review (figure 1 and table 1). Seven studies were conducted in Western countries (n=2532, all based in Europe)10–17 and 16 studies were conducted in people living in South Asia (n=1081, all based in India (indigenous Indians)).18–35 There were 15 RCTs (n=3279), with 9 (n=789) conducted in India.
Table 1

Study characteristics by region

StudyCountrySample sizeDesignFollow-up(months)Intervention type/control groupIntervention
Diabetes management trials in Europe
Mixed trials
 O'Hare et al10UK (England)361Cluster RCT12Mixed/usual careSA link workers, additional DSME from nurse
 Bellary et al11UK (England)1486Cluster RCT24Mixed/usual careSA link workers, additional DSME from nurse
 Choudhury et al14UK (Wales)42Pre-post1Mixed/no controlCulturally adapted X-PERT programme
 Vyas et al16UK (England)211Cluster RCT12Mixed/usual careDiabetes nurse, dietician and chiropodist advice
Education trials
 Hawthorne and Tomlimson12UK (England)201RCT6Education/usual carePicture flashcards and structured education package delivered by link worker
 Hawthorne13 (duplicate)UK (England)199RCT6Education/usual carePicture flashcards delivered by link worker (not trained in psychology)
 Baradaran et al15UK (Scotland)118RCT6Education/usual careCultural-specific education by dietician and podiatrist, didactic and interactive group session, visual aids
 Middelkoop et al17The Netherlands (South Holland)113RCT6Education/patients who received educational materials only at the end of the studyCulture-specific education materials: general diabetes information in Surinam-Hindi language and nutrition information specific to South Asian cooking—by specialist diabetes nurse and dietician
Diabetes management trials in India
Mixed trials
 Balagopal et al18India (Tamil Nadu)30Pre-post7Mixed/no controlCulturally and linguistically appropriate education on dietary modifications, improving physical activity and reducing stress provided by trained trainers; and education on blood glucose management by a DE
 Balagopal et al19India (Gujarat)118Pre-post6Mixed/no controlCulturally and linguistically appropriate health education on dietary modifications, improving physical activity and risk for developing diabetes by CHW; education and counselling by DE. peer based; CHW; group sessions; advice on exercise and diet; Meditation, problem-solving
 DeSouza and Subrahmanya Nairy,26 DeSouza and Nairy27India (Goa)60Pre-post2Mixed/usual careNurse-directed intervention (education, psychosocial support, visual aids)
Exercise-based trials
 Hameed et al24India (Delhi)48RCT2Exercise/group on stationary cycling programme without work load and static stretching exercisesProgressive Resistance Training Program (2–3×/week)
 Misra et al25India (Delhi)30Pre-post3Exercise/no control groupProgressive Resistance Training Program (3×/week)
 Shenoy et al,30 Arora et al31India (Punjab)30RCT4Exercise/participants underwent no training but continued medicationsProgressive resistance training (2 times per weeks) and aerobic exercise (3 times a week)
 Shenoy et al32India (Punjab)40RCT2Exercise/participants underwent no training but continued medicationsAerobic walk using a heart rate monitor and pedometer to achieve a target of 150 min per week
Yoga-based trials: asanas (body postures) and pranayama (breathing exercises)
 Shantakumari et al20India (Kerala)100RCT3Exercise/patients on OHA without yogic exercisesOHA and yoga exercises (asanas and pranayama meditation techniques)
 Vaishali et al21India (Karnataka)57RCT3Exercise/received general healthy lifestyle and exercise informationYogic exercises (asanas) and specially developed breathing techniques (pranayama)
 Singh et al34India (Delhi)24Pre-post1.3ExerciseYoga asanas
 Madanmohan et al35India (Tamil Nadu)15Pre-post1.5ExerciseYoga (asanas and pranayama) including yogic counselling and lifestyle modification advice
Education trials
 Adepu et al22India (Kerala)70RCT4Education/pharmacist counselling at study endPatient counselling by pharmacist
 Ghosh et al23India (Uttar Pradesh)22RCT1.5Education/pharmacist counselling and information leaflets at study endCounselling by pharmacist, information leaflets
 Malathy et al29India (Tamil Nadu)207RCT3Education/patients received counselling and information leaflets at study endPharmacist counselling and information leaflets
 Shetty et al33India (Tamil Nadu)215RCT12Education/usual careSMS messaging on cell phones on diabetes management education
Diet-based trials
 Pande et al28India (Maharashtra)15Pre-post1Diet/no controlLow and low-medium glycaemic load meals

Intervention type: education, exercise, dietary or mixed (two or more intervention types).

CBA, controlled before and after experiment; CHW, community health worker; DE, diabetes educator; DSME, diabetes self-management education; OHA, oral hypoglycaemic agent; RCT, randomised controlled trial; SA, South Asian.

Study characteristics by region Intervention type: education, exercise, dietary or mixed (two or more intervention types). CBA, controlled before and after experiment; CHW, community health worker; DE, diabetes educator; DSME, diabetes self-management education; OHA, oral hypoglycaemic agent; RCT, randomised controlled trial; SA, South Asian.

Patient characteristics

The average age of patients in the studies ranged from 35 to 66 years with the studies from India more often including younger patients (table 2). While approximately half of the patients enrolled in the European-based studies were women, the majority of participants in the India-based studies were men. Mean HbA1c levels at baseline were ≥61 mmol/mol (7.7%) and were generally similar between study regions.
Table 2

Patient characteristics in the studies by region

Study author, yearStudy populationRecruitment siteAgeYearsmeanWomen(%)HbA1cmmol/mol(%)BMIkg/m2 meanSBPmm HgmeanDBP mm Hgmean
Diabetes management trials in Europe
Mixed trials
 O'Hare, 2004Indian, Pakistani and BangladeshiGP practices58.94964 (8.0)14581
 Bellary and O'Hare, 2008Indian, Pakistani and BangladeshiInner city GP practices57.04863 (7.9)28.514083
 Choudhury, 2008BangladeshiUrban community67
 Vyas, 2003PakistaniGP offices46
Education trials
 Hawthorne, 1997PakistaniManchester Diabetes Centre and 10 GP practices535370 (8.5)
 Hawthorne, 2001PakistaniManchester Diabetes Centre or diabetes mini clinics53.25368 (8.4)
 Baradaran, 2006Indian and PakistaniDaycare centres and GP offices58.449
 Middelkoop, 2001South Asian SurinameseGP practice and outpatient clinics53.35067 (8.3)
Diabetes management trials in India
Mixed trials
 Balagopal, 2008IndianRural community35.85923.313393
 Balagopal, 2012IndianRural community41.95324.415189
 DeSouza, 2003, 2004IndianOutpatient clinic, private hospitals41.0–60.028Obese I: 20%C: 6.7%<140 I: 93.3% C: 86.7%
Exercise-based trials
 Hameed, 2012IndianUniversity hospital outpatient clinics44.72768 (8.4)27.313079
 Misra, 2008IndianOutpatient and diabetes clinic40.82761 (7.7)24.1
 Shenoy, 2009IndianUniversity health centre53.44762 (7.8)
 Shenoy, 2010IndianOutpatients522857 (7.4)2712786
Yoga-based trials
 Shantakumari, 2013South AsianOutpatient department of holistic medicine and university-based diabetes clinic45.04923.1
 Vaishali, 2012South AsianDiabetes clinic65.83791 (10.5)27.6
 Singh, 2004IndianNot specified30–6075 (9.0)14286.7
 Madanmohan, 2012IndianUniversity hospital50.4100
Education-based trials
 Adepu, 2007South AsianUrban community pharmacies52.631
 Ghosh, 2010South AsianUrban hospital outpatient>50.028
 Malathy, 2011IndianUrban pharmacies52.05966 (8.2)Obese I: 22.6% C: 20%>140I: 15.3% C: 17.1%>90 I: 26.3% C: 25.8%
 Shetty, 2011IndianOutpatients50.275 (9.0)27.4>140/90I: 42.7%C: 41%
Diet-based interventions
 Pande, 2012IndianMedical College and General Hospital, diabetes outpatient department50.04064 (8.0)18.0–26.0

BMI, body mass index; C, control group; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; GP, general practitioner; HbA1c, glycated haemoglobin; I, intervention group; SBP, systolic blood pressure.

Patient characteristics in the studies by region BMI, body mass index; C, control group; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; GP, general practitioner; HbA1c, glycated haemoglobin; I, intervention group; SBP, systolic blood pressure.

Data quality

Overall, the data quality was modest (table 3). There were five RCTs conducted in India (total n=390) and four RCTs conducted in Europe (total n=2161) that measured HbA1c. Only three of the RCTs reported on either type or method of randomisation and quantified loss to follow-up less than 20%,11 12 21 and only two trials included information on allocation concealment.12 21 Additionally, none of the studies reported on blinding in outcome assessment. Fourteen studies reported loss to follow-up, and two studies had losses greater than 20%.15 16 Only nine studies analysed reported using intention to treat. Quality appraisal of trials ITT, intention-to-treat; NA, not applicable; NS, not specified; RCT, randomised controlled trial.

Interventions

There were seven studies of mixed interventions (three from India, four from Europe), eight educational interventions (four from India and three from Europe), four exercise intervention studies (all from India), four yoga intervention studies (all from India) and one study with a diet-based intervention (from India; table 1).

Interventions from studies of South Asians living in Europe

Intervention studies with South Asians living in Europe were either mixed interventions or education based. Common features of these interventions included enhanced diabetes education that was culturally specific, the use of bilingual link workers (community members and/or healthcare professionals including nurses or dieticians), as well as the use of written materials and visual aids. Link workers assisted patients with language translation, encouraged patient attendance at clinics, and helped organise educational sessions. One study15 included a dietician and podiatrist to provide education using didactic and interactive sessions with visual aids. The other14 used peer educators trained by a general practitioner with a special interest in diabetes to provide educational sessions giving advice on exercise, diet, attending appointments, cultural behaviours and the development of diabetes.

Interventions from studies of indigenous Indians

Studies with indigenous Indians included mixed interventions, exercise, yoga and educational interventions. Common features of these interventions included resistance exercise, and the use of community-based peers and healthcare professionals (pharmacists, nurses) as well as culture-specific dietary education. Three of the four yoga interventions included both asanas (static yoga positions) and pranayama (breathing exercises) and one only included asanas alone.20 21 34 35 Three exercise studies24 25 30 used resistance training, while one study included aerobic exercise.30 31 The other mixed intervention study from Balagopal et al18 featured education and experiential training on meditation/relaxation techniques, cooking (through demonstrations, recipe competitions and model meals) and exercise (through demonstrations, competitive fun events and dance-based exercise).

Change in HbA1c

Twelve studies reported HbA1c, while six additional studies included other measures of glycaemia (table 4). Among RCTs conducted in India (5 trials; n=390), four studies demonstrated significant reductions in HbA1c in the intervention group compared with usual care (yoga and exercise interventions). The yoga interventions were also significant in Northern and Southern India. All exercise interventions were conducted in Northern India, so regional differences could not be ascertained. Among the four RCTs conducted in Europe (n=2161), only one study of an education intervention in 113 patients reported a significant reduction in HbA1c with the intervention,17 whereas the remainder found no significant change (mixed and education interventions). Overall, the interventions associated with significant reductions in HbA1c tended to be based in India, exercise or yoga focused, while the interventions associated with no significant improvement in HbA1c tended to be among the larger trials, South Asian patients living in Europe and focused on enhanced education.
Table 4

Outcomes of diabetes intervention studies*

StudyHbA1cmmol/mol (%)BG (mmol/L)SBP (mmHg)DBP (mmHg)Lipids(mmol/L)Anthropometrics
Mixed trials in Europe
 O'Hare et al10−23 (−0.0) (p=0.87)−4.6 (p=0.035)−3.4 (p=0.003)TC: −0.38 (p=0.005)
 Bellary et al11−22 (−0.2) (p=0.11)−0.33 (p=0.76)−1.91 (p<0.001)TC: +0.03 (p=0.37)BMI: +0.40 (p<0.001)WC: −0.2 (p=0.67)
Mixed trials in India
 Balagopal et al18FBG:−3.34 (p=0.03)−3.2 (p=0.48)−5.5 (p=0.134)BMI: +0.2 (p=0.63)WC: −4.8 cm (p=0.04)
 Balagopal et al19FBG:I −1.06 (p<0.001)I −6.2 (p<0.001)I −0.17 (p<0.001)BMI: I −1.02 (p<0.001)WC: I −3.94 cm (p=0.001)
Exercise-based trials in India
 Hameed et al24−17 (−0.6) (p<0.001)−4.79 (p=0.07)−1.91 (p=0.28)TC: −0.07 (p=0.53)TG: −0.06 (p=0.56)HDL-C:+0.15 (p=0.004)LDL-C: −0.19 (p=0.10)Weight −0.31 (p=0.36)WC (cm): −2.04 (p=0.008)
 Misra et al25I −18 (−0.5) (p<0.001)FBG:I −2.7 (p<0.001)I: TC: −0.39 (p=0.003)TG: −0.39 (p<0.001)HDL:+0.02 (p=0.33)LDL: −0.09 (p=0.21)I: BMI: +0.1 (p=0.614)WC: −1.6 (p<0.001)
 Shenoy et al30PRT: −3 (−1.8) (p=0.002)AE: −9 (−1.3) (p=0.002) C: −21 (−0.21) (p=NS)PRT: −3.83 (p=0.021)AE: −1.44 (p=0.021)C: −1.66 (p=NS)PRT: −9 (p=0.001)AE: −3 (p=NS)C: +2 (p=NS)PRT: −8 (p=0.001)AE: −1 (p=NS)C: +1 (p=NS)
 Shenoy et al32I: −15 (−0.8) (p=0.0001)C: −23 (−0.1)(p=0.242)Difference in post-test I and C scores p=0.0023FBGI: −4.24 (p=0.0001)C: −0.12 (p=0.0007)Difference in post-test I and C scores p=0.0001I: +1.5 (p=0.868)C: −3.3 (p=0.133)Difference in post-test I and C scores p=0.019I: −10.8 (p=0.010)C: −3.7 (p=0.0058)Difference in post-test I and C scores p=0.0001BMI: I: −1.1 (p=0.0001)C: +0.6 (p=0.0001)Difference in post-test I and C scores p=0.56
Yoga-based interventions in India
 Vaishali et al21−15 (−0.8) (p<0.001)FBG:−1.58 (p<0.001)TC: −0.48 (p<0.001)TG: −0.25 (p<0.001)HDL:+0.13 (p<0.001)LDL: −0.18 (p<0.05)
 Singh et al34−10 (−1.2) p=0.035FBG:−2.7 p<0.001−16 p=0.001−8.8 p=0.001
 Madanmohan et al35FBG:−1.1 p=0.004TC: −0.13 p=0.01LDL −0.28 p=0.001HDL −0.45 p=0.02
 Shantakumari et al20TC: I −0.65 (p<0.01)C+0.25 (p=NS)TG: I −0.25 (p<0.05);C +0.28 (p=NS)LDL-C: I −0.63 (p<0.01);C +0.01 (p=NS)HDL-C: I+0.07 (p=NS);C −0.03 (p=NS)Weight: I −2.6 (p<0.05)C+0.86 (p<0.05)BMI: I −1.53 (p=NS)C+0.3 (p=NS)
Education-based interventions in Europe
 Hawthorne and Tomlimson12I −20 (−0.3) (p=NS)I: TC 0.04
 Hawthorne13−20 (−0.4) (p=NS)
 Middelkoop et al17−19 (−0.4) (p=0.02)
Education-based interventions in India
 Shetty et al33NS difference in mean HbA1c<64 (8%)I:+16.7%C:+24.3%FBG: I −1.1TC: I: −0.4 p<0.03C: −0.3 p<0.03
 Adepu et al22Capillary BG:I: −3.12, (p<0.001)C: −0.14(p=NS)
 Gosh et al23FBG:−0.83 (p<0.05)Postprandial G−1.94 (p<0.01)
 Malathy et al29Postprandial glucose:I −1.81C −0.99 (p<0.001)TC: I −0.53 (p<0.001)C −0.29 (p<0.05)LDL: I −0.52 (p<0.001)C −0.29 (p<0.01)HDL: I+0.04 (p<0.05)C+0.02 (p=NS)TG I −0.12 (p<0.001)C −0.08 (p=NS)
Diet-based interventions India
 Pande, 2012I −14 (−0.9)(p<0.001)FBG:I −1.99(p<0.001)I TG −0.90 (p<0.001)TC −1.01 (p<0.001)HDL+0.18 (p=0.003)LDL −0.67 (p=0.009)

*Note that 4 of the studies (Baradaran, Choudhury, Vyas and DeSouza) only included knowledge outcomes and thus were not included in this table (see (table 5)).

The numbers represent the difference in change in parameters between the intervention and control groups if not otherwise stated.

AE, aerobic exercise; BG, blood glucose; BMI, body mass index; C, control group; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; HbA1c, glycated haemoglobin; HDL-C, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; I, intervention group; LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; NS, not significant; PRT, progressive resistance training group; SBP, systolic blood pressure; TC, total cholesterol; TG, triglycerides; WC, waist circumference.

Outcomes of diabetes intervention studies* *Note that 4 of the studies (Baradaran, Choudhury, Vyas and DeSouza) only included knowledge outcomes and thus were not included in this table (see (table 5)).
Table 5

Change in knowledge of diabetes, its prevention, management and complications and on quality of life

StudyInterventionKnowledge of diabetes, its prevention, management and complications and patients’ quality of life
Studies based in Europe
 Hawthorne and Tomlimson12EducationChange in per cent of patients correctly answering questions about

Knowledge: importance of diet (I +20%, C +6%), food group value scores (I +14%, C 1.5%), individual food value scores (I +13%, C +3.2%; adjusted difference for I is +7.8%), can manage hyperglycaemia (I +64%, C +12%), knowledge about the purpose of screening (I +48%, C baseline data missing to calculate per cent change), knowledge about diabetes complications (I +60%, C +1%) and knowledge about the role of the chiropodist (I +35%, C baseline data missing to calculate per cent change)

Attitudes and behaviours: choosing correct food at wedding (I +14%, C −1.9%), glucose monitoring (I +29%, C 0%), number of people checking glucose more than once a week (I +33%, C baseline data missing to calculate per cent change), and keeping records of glucose levels (I +32%, C −7%); however, an attitude that is hard to refuse food at social events did not change after the intervention (I +10%, C +5%)

 Hawthorne13EducationChange in scores or per cent of patients correctly answering questions related to diabetes in M and W: food knowledge scores (I: M +11%, W +14%; C: M +3%, W +4%), knowledge of eye (I: M +55%, W +63%; C: M −3%, W +4%), heart (I: M +32%, W +54%; C: M −3%, W −3%) and feet diabetes complications (I: M +47%, W +67%; C: M +9%, W +17%), knowledge of chiropody (I: M +42%, W +32%; C: M +10%, W −5%), can manage hyperglycaemia (I: M +68%, W +63%; C: M +9%, W +13%), know why to control glucose (I: M +60%, W +61%; C: M +3%, W 0%), know purpose of annual reviews (I: M +66%, W +33%; C: M +14%, W −7%), check glucose regularly (I: M +27%, W +40%; C: M −29%, W 0%) and keep glucose records (I: M +36%, W +28%; C: M −8%, W −4%)Change in scores or per cent of patients correctly answering questions related to diabetes in LW and IW: food knowledge scores (LW +12%, IW +6%), knowledge of eye (LW +59%, IW +30%), heart (LW +53%, IW +50%), and feet (LW +40%, IW +45%), diabetes complications, knowledge of chiropody (LW +42%, IW +25%), can manage hyperglycaemia (LW +53%, IW +55%), know why to control glucose (LW +71%, IW +42%), know purpose of annual checks (LW +44%, IW +42%), check glucose regularly (LW +20%, IW +17%)
 Choudhury et al14EducationThere was no significant change in days study participants adhered to general and specific diet, recommended exercise or foot care (SDSCA Questionnaire); no control group available.
 Baradaran et al15EducationDifference in mean change in scores between I and C groups for knowledge 1.25 (p=0.27); attitude towards seriousness −0.17 (p=0.76); attitude towards complications 0.68 (p=0.38) and practice 0.76 (p=0.23).Per cent improvement in mean scores for knowledge (I intervention, EC, WC) about diabetes (I +12.5% (p=0.04); EC +5% (p=0.53); WC +12.2% (p=0.19), attitudes towards seriousness of diabetes (I +13.5% (p=0.005); EC +16.3% (p=0.001); WC +12.4% (p=0.04)), attitudes towards diabetes complications (I +8.1% (p=0.05); EC +1.5% (p=0.40); WC +6% (p=0.19)), and practice related to diabetes (I +20% (p=0.005); EC +1.7% (p=0.63); WC +25% (p=0.007))
 Vyas et al16MixedKnowledge awareness and self-management questionnaires validated by Hawthorne. I: 0.09 knowledge; −0.15 self-management; C: 0.02 knowledge; 0.29 self-management (differences in prescores and postscores in the I and C groups)NS difference between intervention and control
Studies based in India
 Balagopal et al18MixedKnowledge score: +0.94 (p=0.085)
 Balagopal et al19MixedDiabetes knowledge score (American Diabetes Association risk test): +0.47 (p<0.001)
 Adepu et al22EducationChange in per cent of patients correctly answering questions about knowledge of diabetes definition (I +22, C no change), causes of diabetes (I +67, C −2), methods of glucose measurement (I +43, C +4), diabetes complications (kidney (I +43, C no change), eye (I +27, C −3), frequency of eye examinations (I +67, C no change)), relationship between blood pressure and kidney functioning (I +60, C +3), frequency of blood pressure measurement in patients with diabetes (I +46, C +3), role of weight reduction in diabetes (I +47, C no change), hypoglycaemia (I +39, C +2) and its prevention/management (I +44, C −3)
 DeSouza and Subrahmanya Nairy,26 DeSouza and Nairy27Education2003; Quality of life scores (difference in prescores and postscores for I and C groups):Total quality of life I +6.50, C +0.99 (p<0.05); health and functioning domain I +7.18, C +0.93 (p<0.05); social-economic domain I +5.81, C +0.61 (p<0.05); psychological-spiritual I +0.81, C +0.15 (p=NS); family domain I +4.17, C +1.45 (p<0.05)2004—Health-promoting behaviours scores (difference between postscores and pretest scores in the I and C groups and p value depicting the difference in post-test scores between the I and C groups): total health-promoting behaviour score: I +33.93, C 2.00 (p<0.001); health and functioning domain I +30.33, C +3.93 (p<0.001); social-economic domain I 3.07, C −0.46 (p<0.001); psychological-spiritual domain I +3.87, C −1.47 (p<0.001); family domain I +2.47, C −0.94 (p<0.001)
 Malathy et al29EducationKAP scores (differences in pre-KAP and post-KAP scores in the I and C groups)Knowledge: I +3.12 (p=0.0001); C −0.06 (p=NS)Attitude: I +0.92 (p=0.0001); C +0.06 (p=NS)Practice: I +0.08 (p=0.06); C no change (p=NS)Overall: I +4 (p=0.0001); C+0.4 (p=NS)

C, control group; EC, ethnic control; I, intervention group; IW, illiterate women; KAP, knowledge, attitude and practice; LW, literate women; NS, not significant; M, men; W, women; WC, white control.

The numbers represent the difference in change in parameters between the intervention and control groups if not otherwise stated. AE, aerobic exercise; BG, blood glucose; BMI, body mass index; C, control group; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; HbA1c, glycated haemoglobin; HDL-C, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; I, intervention group; LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; NS, not significant; PRT, progressive resistance training group; SBP, systolic blood pressure; TC, total cholesterol; TG, triglycerides; WC, waist circumference.

Other end points

Eight studies reported blood pressure end points; and in four of the five RCT's reporting blood pressure outcomes, interventions were associated with reduced mean systolic (range −0.33 to −9 mm Hg) or diastolic blood pressure (range −1.91 to −10.8 mm Hg) compared with usual care. Of the two studies conducted in Europe, both reported significant reductions in either systolic or diastolic blood pressure. Of the six studies of indigenous Indians, four reported significant reductions in blood pressure. Mixed and exercise interventions were associated with blood pressure reduction. None of the education or dietary intervention studies evaluated blood pressure (all conducted in India). Eleven studies evaluated lipid levels with 10 intervention studies demonstrating significant reductions in at least one measured lipid level across all the intervention types (table 4) with two of three studies from Europe and the other eight from India reporting significant reductions. Six studies among indigenous Indians included BMI or weight measurement with three studies reporting significant reductions (pretest post-test mixed intervention, one yoga and one exercise-based RCT),19 32 whereas three others reported no significant reduction or weight increases. All four studies conducted in India that measured WC found significant reductions with the intervention. One European mixed trial measured BMI and WC and identified a significant increase in BMI with the intervention. Ten studies reported the effect of educational and mixed interventions on knowledge of diabetes, its prevention, management and complications and/or on quality of life (table 5). Among indigenous Indians, the majority of studies targeting diabetes knowledge and related practices as well as patients' quality of life through educational interventions reported significant improvement in the targeted outcomes. Among education studies conducted in Europe targeting knowledge of and practices related to diabetes, education intervention was not consistently associated with the improvement of the outcomes. Specifically, while half of the studies reported an improvement in knowledge of and attitudes and behaviours related to diabetes, the other half either found no such improvement14 or the difference in mean change scores between the intervention and control groups did not differ.15 Improvement in knowledge was observed in men and women and across literacy levels in one study.13 Change in knowledge of diabetes, its prevention, management and complications and on quality of life Knowledge: importance of diet (I +20%, C +6%), food group value scores (I +14%, C 1.5%), individual food value scores (I +13%, C +3.2%; adjusted difference for I is +7.8%), can manage hyperglycaemia (I +64%, C +12%), knowledge about the purpose of screening (I +48%, C baseline data missing to calculate per cent change), knowledge about diabetes complications (I +60%, C +1%) and knowledge about the role of the chiropodist (I +35%, C baseline data missing to calculate per cent change) Attitudes and behaviours: choosing correct food at wedding (I +14%, C −1.9%), glucose monitoring (I +29%, C 0%), number of people checking glucose more than once a week (I +33%, C baseline data missing to calculate per cent change), and keeping records of glucose levels (I +32%, C −7%); however, an attitude that is hard to refuse food at social events did not change after the intervention (I +10%, C +5%) C, control group; EC, ethnic control; I, intervention group; IW, illiterate women; KAP, knowledge, attitude and practice; LW, literate women; NS, not significant; M, men; W, women; WC, white control.

Higher quality randomised studies

There were three randomised studies with a lower risk of bias11–13 21 (two mixed intervention RCTs conducted in Europe and one yoga-based trial conducted in India). Studies by Bellary et al11 and Hawthorne12 and Hawthorne and Tomlimson,13 conducted in Europe (total n=1687), used bilingual, bicultural enhanced diabetes education, link workers and visual aids, and they found no significant improvement in HbA1c level with these interventions compared with usual control. In contrast, in the exercise intervention study based in India (n=57) and led by Vaishali et al,21 there was a significant reduction in HbA1c levels among patients who underwent the intervention compared with their counterparts who did not undergo the exercise intervention.

Discussion

From the present review, diabetes management interventions targeted at South Asian patients were heterogeneous, yielding variable and limited success in HbA1c reduction. Changes in HbA1c level differed by region and intervention, whereby studies based in India that included exercise or yoga interventions were most successful in reducing HbA1c among individuals with type 2 diabetes. Blood pressure, lipid levels and knowledge were generally improved with various diabetes interventions compared with usual care in European-based and Indian-based studies, whereas BMI did not generally change with the interventions across studies. The observation that HbA1c reduction was variable and limited across trials in Europe poses a stark contrast to the findings of culturally adapted diabetes management trials targeted at other ethnic groups studied in the Western world.36–38 Meta-analyses of RCTs ascertained that culturally adapted diabetes management programmes are superior to non-culturally adapted programmes with significant improvements (−17 mmol/mol (−0.6%)) in HbA1c at 6 months and knowledge scores.36–38 Cultural adaptation processes aim to adapt interventions or messages using culture to the intended audience. However, these meta-analyses included largely African-American or Hispanic ethnic groups. Interventions that were face to face, incorporated a peer educator and cognitive reframing techniques were found to be associated with reductions in HbA1c compared with usual care in African-American or Hispanic populations.39 In a culturally adapted diabetes programme targeted to a Latin American population, the intervention consisted of use of culturally tailored education, exercise (Latin dance) and dietary change compared with usual care. The cultural adaptations included family involvement, foods common in Latin American countries that could be used in modified Mediterranean diet recipes; and it also incorporated Latin music, language and symbols in meetings and materials.40 The intervention group significantly reduced HbA1c (−19 mmol/mol (−0.4%)) at 6 months compared with the usual care group. Many of the aforementioned culturally adapted techniques were incorporated in the interventions targeted at South Asian patients with type 2 diabetes described in this review paper; however, reduction in HbA1c levels was not consistent across studies. We can speculate that the success of the trials from the meta-analysis in reducing HbA1c may lie in the depth to which the interventions were culturally adapted. To illustrate this concept, Resnicow et al41 contrasted surface and deep structural cultural adaptations. Surface structure is based on superficial characteristics of a population including people, language, places and food. Conversely, deep structure involves the integration of the sociocultural concepts, historical context and psychological factors unique to a population. Resnicow et al41 states “while adding surface structure to health programming may increase the receptivity of messages, it is deep cultural adaptation that truly fosters salient messaging”. In turn, it is possible that the trials from the meta-analysis achieved a greater depth of cultural adaptation compared with the RCTs conducted in Europe and described in this review. There are several possible explanations underlying the differences in HbA1c changes reported in trials conducted in India compared with trials of patients living in Europe. While the UK studies were larger and mainly adopted an RCT design, the studies in India were generally smaller and eight of the studies employed a pre-post study design (usually a single group) that limits the ability to ascertain causality with the interventions and are associated with some overinflation of effect estimates.42 In addition, the variance in results may be explained by differences between the patient populations used in the two different regions. Specifically, trials of South Asians living in India included younger patients and more men than women. It is possible that men may have been more able to engage in physical activity programmes or exerted more control over the diet at home than women. Another possible explanation arises from systemic differences between the two regions. While the UK system is publicly funded, the Indian healthcare system has both private and public funding. Considering privatisation and different levels of socioeconomic position between the regions, there may be significantly less baseline knowledge of diabetes among patients living in India allowing for greater gains with interventions. Additional explanations regarding the differences in outcomes may be rooted in the design of the interventions used in trials. Compared with studies from India, the European studies did not include specific exercise programmes. While it is likely that diabetes self-management education featured in the Europe-based studies advised physical exercise, the trials from India formally integrated yoga and resistance training into their interventions. Studies from India also tended to incorporate experiential-based interventions including meditation training, cooking competitions and dancercise. This raises the possibility that strategies that are immersive and experiential rather than didactic/instructional may lead to better health behaviour change in South Asian groups. Moreover, while all studies from both locations delivered education, advice and training in Indian languages, it is not clear if any deeper cultural adaptations were employed; such adaptations may have been more implicit in the Indian-based interventions. For example, the UK studies featured interventions that were linguistically accessible for the patient population (ie, South Asian link workers, picture flashcards); meanwhile, however, many interventions from India ventured beyond language to include culturally rooted traditions such as specific forms of yoga, meditation and dance. Conversely, South Asian trial participants living in Europe may have been more acculturated compared with those living in India so that cultural adaptation of a diabetes education programme was less effective. Several studies identified significant social stigma attached to having diabetes in South Asian populations that might have negatively influenced their taking part in research studies or fully participating in the research interventions within trials in India and the West. Whether this stigma differs between migrant and indigenous Indians is unknown. Indeed, studies of Western trials demonstrate lower participation of South Asians in clinical studies compared with their non-South Asian counterparts.43 Additionally, though all the studies from India reported some statistically significant positive outcomes, it is possible that smaller study effects/publication bias could exist here, and thus small studies from India with negative outcomes may have not been published. There are several potential reasons underlying the significant intercountry differences in education-based trials, whereby more success in improvement of knowledge of and practices related to diabetes was observed in studies that originated from India. One possible explanation is that the educational interventions from India provided patients with a broader scope of knowledge; that is, information beyond the fundamentals of diabetes self-management. For instance, the intervention conducted by DeSouza and Subrahmanya Nairy26 27 taught patients about relaxation and stress management as well as the role of family support and participation. Similarly, the programme employed by Balagopal et al19 featured education on meditation and relaxation techniques. Meanwhile, on the basis of the descriptions of UK educational studies, the UK interventions did not appear to venture into these domains. Furthermore, it is also unclear as to whether the success of trials from India assessing patient knowledge was due to something more than just education; specifically, there may exist the inherent ability of the interventions from India to encompass more cultural aspects then we realise. Overall, therefore, the strength of the educational trials from India may have been a blend of encompassing a larger breadth of educational domains and embodying a greater depth of cultural adaptation. There are several limitations of this systematic review. In terms of the studies selected for the review, the overall quality of the studies was in the low-to-moderate range according to the quality components we studied. As such, each study is limited by potential biases. In addition, many of the studies, especially those from India, had smaller sample sizes and interventions between studies varied. Most trials did not report information on blinding of outcome assessment or details of the randomisation, thereby limiting the conclusions of this review. All of the studies conducted in South Asian countries were limited to India, and therefore these findings may not be generalised to other South Asian populations. The lack of studies from other South Asian countries may reflect differences in research support rather than a lower prevalence of diabetes in other South Asian countries. Given the significant heterogeneity in interventions and outcome results, a pooled analysis was not possible. In addition, key components of diabetes management including medication adherence were not addressed in almost all of the trials.

Conclusion

Overall, effectiveness of interventions differed by region. The most successful interventions for reducing HbA1c were more likely to be conducted among South Asians living in India and those interventions included yoga and exercise. While studies from both Western countries and South Asia observed improvements in lipid and blood pressure outcomes, studies from India more often reported reduction in patient BMI, WC and improved diabetes knowledge. Novel interventions are needed to improve glycaemic control of South Asians living in Western countries such as the inclusion of yoga or use of dance to engage participants in improving health behaviours.
  36 in total

Review 1.  Cultural sensitivity in public health: defined and demystified.

Authors:  K Resnicow; T Baranowski; J S Ahluwalia; R L Braithwaite
Journal:  Ethn Dis       Date:  1999       Impact factor: 1.847

Review 2.  Culturally appropriate health education for Type 2 diabetes in ethnic minority groups: a systematic and narrative review of randomized controlled trials.

Authors:  K Hawthorne; Y Robles; R Cannings-John; A G K Edwards
Journal:  Diabet Med       Date:  2010-06       Impact factor: 4.359

3.  Intensified multifactorial intervention in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and microalbuminuria: the Steno type 2 randomised study.

Authors:  P Gaede; P Vedel; H H Parving; O Pedersen
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1999-02-20       Impact factor: 79.321

4.  Does quality of reports of randomised trials affect estimates of intervention efficacy reported in meta-analyses?

Authors:  D Moher; B Pham; A Jones; D J Cook; A R Jadad; M Moher; P Tugwell; T P Klassen
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1998-08-22       Impact factor: 79.321

5.  One-to-one teaching with pictures--flashcard health education for British Asians with diabetes.

Authors:  K Hawthorne; S Tomlinson
Journal:  Br J Gen Pract       Date:  1997-05       Impact factor: 5.386

6.  Reinforcement of adherence to prescription recommendations in Asian Indian diabetes patients using short message service (SMS)--a pilot study.

Authors:  Ananth Samith Shetty; Snehalatha Chamukuttan; Arun Nanditha; Roopesh Kumar Champat Raj; Ambady Ramachandran
Journal:  J Assoc Physicians India       Date:  2011-11

Review 7.  Intensive glucose control and cardiovascular outcomes in type 2 diabetes.

Authors:  Richard J Macisaac; George Jerums
Journal:  Heart Lung Circ       Date:  2010-08-31       Impact factor: 2.975

8.  A pilot randomized trial in primary care to investigate and improve knowledge, awareness and self-management among South Asians with diabetes in Manchester.

Authors:  A Vyas; A Z Haidery; P G Wiles; S Gill; C Roberts; J K Cruickshank
Journal:  Diabet Med       Date:  2003-12       Impact factor: 4.359

9.  Hispanic chronic disease self-management: a randomized community-based outcome trial.

Authors:  Kate R Lorig; Philip L Ritter; Virginia M González
Journal:  Nurs Res       Date:  2003 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 2.381

Review 10.  Characteristics and effectiveness of diabetes self-management educational programs targeted to racial/ethnic minority groups: a systematic review, meta-analysis and meta-regression.

Authors:  Ignacio Ricci-Cabello; Isabel Ruiz-Pérez; Antonio Rojas-García; Guadalupe Pastor; Miguel Rodríguez-Barranco; Daniela C Gonçalves
Journal:  BMC Endocr Disord       Date:  2014-07-19       Impact factor: 2.763

View more
  7 in total

1.  Pharmacists Intervention Reduced Drug-Related Problems in the Treatment of Patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.

Authors:  Azizah Nasution; Aminah Dalimunthe; Khairunnisa Khairunnisa
Journal:  Open Access Maced J Med Sci       Date:  2019-11-14

2.  Prevalence and Predictors of Health-Related Internet and Digital Device Use in a Sample of South Asian Adults in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada: Results From a 2014 Community-Based Survey.

Authors:  Mark J Makowsky; Charlotte A Jones; Shahnaz Davachi
Journal:  JMIR Public Health Surveill       Date:  2021-01-08

3.  Development of a Yoga Program for Type-2 Diabetes Prevention (YOGA-DP) Among High-Risk People in India.

Authors:  Kaushik Chattopadhyay; Pallavi Mishra; Nandi Krishnamurthy Manjunath; Tess Harris; Mark Hamer; Sheila Margaret Greenfield; Haiquan Wang; Kavita Singh; Sarah Anne Lewis; Nikhil Tandon; Sanjay Kinra; Dorairaj Prabhakaran
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2020-11-17

4.  Evaluating Glycemic Control in Patients of South Asian Origin With Type 2 Diabetes Using a Digital Therapeutic Platform: Analysis of Real-World Data.

Authors:  Arjun Krishnakumar; Ritika Verma; Rajeev Chawla; Aravind Sosale; Banshi Saboo; Shilpa Joshi; Maaz Shaikh; Abhishek Shah; Siddhesh Kolwankar; Vinod Mattoo
Journal:  J Med Internet Res       Date:  2021-03-25       Impact factor: 5.428

5.  Effectiveness of a Multicomponent Intervention in Primary Care That Addresses Patients with Diabetes Mellitus with Two or More Unhealthy Habits, Such as Diet, Physical Activity or Smoking: Multicenter Randomized Cluster Trial (EIRA Study).

Authors:  Francisco Represas-Carrera; Sabela Couso-Viana; Fátima Méndez-López; Bárbara Masluk; Rosa Magallón-Botaya; Jose I Recio-Rodríguez; Haizea Pombo; Alfonso Leiva-Rus; Montserrat Gil-Girbau; Emma Motrico; Ruth Martí-Lluch; Francisco Gude; Ana Clavería
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2021-05-28       Impact factor: 3.390

6.  Mindfulness-Based Meditation Versus Progressive Relaxation Meditation: Impact on Chronic Pain in Older Female Patients With Diabetic Neuropathy.

Authors:  Nadia Hussain; Amira S A Said
Journal:  J Evid Based Integr Med       Date:  2019 Jan-Dec

Review 7.  Cultural Identity Conflict Informs Engagement with Self-Management Behaviours for South Asian Patients Living with Type-2 Diabetes: A Critical Interpretative Synthesis of Qualitative Research Studies.

Authors:  Tasneem Patel; Kanayo Umeh; Helen Poole; Ishfaq Vaja; Lisa Newson
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2021-03-05       Impact factor: 3.390

  7 in total

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