$tagsList = ['Hidradenitis Suppurativa','Hives','HIV/AIDS','Psoriatic Arthritis','Psoriasis']; $catList = ['Hidradenitis Suppurativa','Hives','HIV/AIDS','Psoriatic Arthritis','Psoriasis']; Skip to main content

Findings persist even after controlling for adverse neighborhood conditions.

Racial residential segregation is associated with glycemic control in Black youth with type 1 diabetes (T1D), according to a study published online April 25 inย Pediatrics.

Deborah A. Ellis, Ph.D., from Wayne State University in Detroit, and colleagues investigated the effects of racial residential segregation on the diabetes health of young Black adolescents with T1D. The analysis included 148 participants seen at one of seven pediatric diabetes clinics in two U.S. cities.

The researchers found that hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) was significantly associated with racial residential segregation, while youth-reported diabetes management was not. Family income, age, and insulin delivery method were all significantly associated with HbA1c in model 1 of hierarchical regression analyses, but only racial residential segregation, age, and insulin delivery method were significantly associated with HbA1c in model 2. One-quarter of variance in HbA1c was explained by model 2, even after controlling for adverse neighborhood conditions.

“Racial residential segregation was associated with glycemic control in a sample of Black youth with T1D and accounted for variance in HbA1c even after controlling for adverse neighborhood conditions,” the authors write. “Policies to reduce residential segregation, along with improved screening for neighborhood-level risk, hold the potential to improve the health of a vulnerable population of youth.”

Abstract/Full Text

Editorial (subscription or payment may be required)

You May Also Like::  AHA News: Genes, Neighborhoods and a Surprising Finding on Stroke Risk