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News : Health Nov 25, 2008 - 4:47 PM


Department of Public Health launches diabetes awareness campaign targeting African Americans in three major cities

By Department of Public Health


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African Americans Nearly Twice as Likely to Have Diabetes Than Non-Hispanic Whites

The Department of Public Health (DPH) today announced an innovative campaign at to increase awareness among African American Connecticut residents about diabetes that features posters and take-away information cards to be posted at hair salons and barbershops throughout Bridgeport, Hartford, and New Haven. The announcement was made at It’s a Gee Thang Barber Salon, a barbershop and hair salon in Hartford.

“The startling truth is that one-third of people who have diabetes don’t even know it,” stated DPH Commissioner J. Robert Galvin, M.D., M.P.H., M.B.A. “It is important that people who are at risk, especially African Americans, get tested so that they can better manage the disease and avoid complications.”

The main objective of the campaign is to increase diabetes awareness among African Americans in Connecticut. Diabetes is more prevalent among African Americans than whites or Hispanics in Connecticut. One in four African American women aged 55 or older have diabetes and African Americans are 1.8 times more likely than non-Hispanic whites to have the disease. An estimated 6.2% of the Connecticut adult population or approximately 163,000 adults age 18 years and older have been diagnosed with diabetes (2003-2005 data). An additional 70,000 Connecticut adults are estimated to have undiagnosed diabetes. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, diabetes cost Connecticut an estimated $1.7 billion in direct and indirect costs in 2003.

African Americans are not only more likely than whites or Hispanics to have diabetes, but they are also more likely to suffer from complications related to the disease. Complications from diabetes include blindness, kidney disease, amputations, heart disease and stroke, and nerve damage. Heart disease and stroke make up 65% of deaths in African Americans with diabetes. African Americans are also 2.7 times more likely to suffer lower-limb amputations and more likely to suffer from kidney disease.

For additional information on diabetes, please go online and visit the Connecticut Department of Public Health website at www.ct.gov/dph or the American Diabetes Association at www.diabetes.org or call (860) 509-8211.

The Connecticut Department of Public Health is the state’s leader in public health policy and advocacy with a mission to protect and promote the health and safety of the people of our state. To contact the department, please visit its website at www.ct.gov/dph or call (860) 509-7270.




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