| Literature DB >> 27493797 |
Starla Hairston Blanks1, Henrie Treadwell2, Anya Bazzell1, Whitney Graves1, Olivia Osaji1, Juanita Dean3, James T McLawhorn3, Jareese Lee Stroud1.
Abstract
Purpose. The I Am Woman (IAW) Program is a community-based, culturally responsive, and gender-specific nutrition, obesity, and diabetes educational prevention program designed for African American women (AAW). Chronic nutrition-related health conditions such as excess body weight, diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular disease, and some forms of cancer are common among many African American women. Methods. IAW engaged AAW at risk for such deleterious health conditions by developing a health education intervention that aimed to support weight loss and management, improve knowledge about healthy lifestyle behavioral choices, and facilitate increased access to comprehensive healthcare. This Community Health Worker- (CHW-) led program enrolled 79 AAW aged 18 and older in a 7-week group health education intervention. Results. Following the intervention, results indicated that participants had greater knowledge about nutrition and health, strategies for prevention and management of obesity and diabetes, increased engagement in exercise and fitness activities, and decreased blood pressure, weight, body, and mass index. Cholesterol levels remained relatively unchanged. Additionally, AAW visited a primary care doctor more frequently and indicated greater interest in addressing their health concerns. Conclusion. This model of prevention appears to be a promising approach for increasing awareness about ways to improve the health and well-being of AAW.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27493797 PMCID: PMC4963564 DOI: 10.1155/2016/3609289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obes ISSN: 2090-0708
Figure 1Intervention healthcare access and utilization.
Figure 2Preintervention exercise habits.
Figure 3Postintervention knowledge assessment.
Preintervention and postintervention measured screening health indicators (n = 79).
| Measured indicator | Preintervention, % | Postintervention, % | Change% |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blood pressure (mm Hg)—systolic and/or diastolic | |||
| <120 and <80 normal | 26 | 28 | +2 |
| 120–139 or 80–89 borderline | 30 | 19 | −11 |
| 140–159 or 90–99 high | 17 | 25 | +8 |
| ≥160 or ≥100 high | 26 | 28 | +2 |
|
| |||
| Blood glucose, random (mg/dL) | |||
| 70–139 normal | 85 | 94 | +9 |
| 140–199 borderline | 10 | 0 | −10 |
| ≥200 mg high | 6 | 6 | 0 |
|
| |||
| Total blood cholesterol, random (mg/dL) | |||
| <200 desirable range | 82 | 83 | +1 |
| 200–239 borderline high | 12 | 11 | −1 |
| ≥240 high | 6 | 6 | 0 |