Millions of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders
at Increased Risk for Type 2 Diabetes
New Awareness Campaign Uses Generational Appeal to Help Reverse
Diabetes Risk
San Diego About 40 percent of adults ages 40 to 74
or 41 million people have pre-diabetes, a condition
that raises a person’s risk for developing type 2 diabetes,
heart disease, and stroke. Studies show that Asian Americans and
Pacific Islanders who are overweight are at increased risk for type
2 diabetes, and some groups, including Native Hawaiians, Filipinos,
and Japanese Americans living in Hawaii, are twice as likely to
have diabetes as white residents of similar age.
To respond to this serious health threat, the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services’ (HHS) National Diabetes Education
Program (NDEP) launched a public awareness campaign today called
“Two Reasons I Find Time to Prevent Diabetes…My Future
and Theirs” at the Paradise Valley Hospital in National City,
a San Diego suburb. The campaign delivers the message that type
2 diabetes can be prevented or delayed with modest weight loss by
getting regular physical activity and making healthy food choices.
“Two Reasons I Find Time to Prevent Diabetes” is part
of NDEP’s Small Steps. Big Rewards. Prevent type
2 Diabetes campaign that targets groups at high risk for diabetes
by promoting the importance of losing a small amount of weight.
Tailored specifically for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders,
“Two Reasons” speaks to the strong intergenerational
family ties in Asian American and Pacific Islander communities and
encourages people at risk to make lifestyle changes now so they
can live a long and healthy life and enjoy their loved ones in the
future.
“We are asking Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders to find
out if they are at risk for type 2 diabetes, and we’re showing
them how to take action to prevent it,” said HHS Secretary
Tommy G. Thompson. “Asian Americans may not realize that the
weight they think is healthy is putting them at risk for diabetes.
That’s why the Small Steps campaign is so important.”
Nina Agbayani, Director of Programs for the Association of Asian
Pacific Community Health Organizations (AAPCHO), discussed her organization’s
involvement with the campaign. “Asian Americans and Pacific
Islanders do not have to suffer from diabetes and its complications,”
said Ms. Agbayani. “Working with our member organizations
and clinics across the United States, we will get the word out that
preventing type 2 diabetes is proven, possible, and powerful,”
she said. AAPCHO is dedicated to improving the health status and
access to health care of Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and
Pacific Islanders in the United States.
“This partnership of community-based health programs and a
national public awareness campaign is a prescription for making
real inroads in stemming the diabetes epidemic,” said Dr.
James R. Gavin III, Chair of the NDEP and President of the Morehouse
School of Medicine.
San Diego native Carmencita Domingo participated in the campaign
launch as a member of NDEP’s Small Steps. Big Rewards.
Team to Prevent type 2 Diabetes. This group of committed citizens
was assembled by NDEP to put a human face on the populations that
are at high risk for the disease. Each member is actively working
in his or her community to demonstrate lifestyle changes they have
made to prevent or delay diabetes. Ms. Domingo sets an example as
activity director at the Hope Adult Day Health Care Center in the
San Diego area.
“I adopted a healthy lifestyle and made the commitment to
inform my family and friends about the freedoms it can bring
freedom from daily injections of insulin, freedom from blindness,
and freedom from amputation,” said Ms. Domingo. “My
older relatives have diabetes, so I’m working hard to break
the cycle of this devastating disease in future generations. I want
to be around for my grandchildren and great grandchildren,”
she said.
The “Two Reasons” campaign includes radio and print
public service ads, tip sheets, and posters produced in English, Chinese,
Cambodian, Hmong, Korean, Tagalog (for Filipinos), Thai, and Vietnamese.
Materials in eight additional languages will be released later this
year. Hundreds of public and private partners will help distribute
the materials throughout the Asian American and Pacific Islander community.
Materials are also available on the NDEP website at www.ndep.nih.gov.
For more information about the diabetes prevention campaign, free
materials, tip sheets, and the GAMEPLAN for Preventing type 2
Diabetes, which contains tools to help people lose weight, get
active, and track their progress, visit the NDEP website at www.ndep.nih.gov
or call 1-800-438-5383.
The National Diabetes Education Program, co-sponsored by the
National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, is a leading federal source of information about
diabetes control and prevention. The NDEP has more than 200 partner
organizations that form a network to reach the health care community
and those affected by and at risk for diabetes at the national,
state, and local levels.
Paradise Valley Hospital is a 301-bed, acute care, non-profit
hospital providing numerous programs and services to meet the changing
needs of the San Diego community. Committed to disease prevention,
the hospital’s lifestyle change programs focus on weight reduction
and stress management. Paradise Valley is currently celebrating
its centennial anniversary.
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