Psychosocial predictors of weight loss among American Indian and Alaska Native participants in a diabetes prevention translational project
Includes bibliographic references. The association of psychosocial factors (psychological distress, coping skills, family support, trauma exposure, and spirituality) with initial weight and weight loss among American Indians and Alaska Natives (AI/Ans) in a diabetes prevention translational project...
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ftmountainschol:oai:mountainscholar.org:10968/1164 2023-05-15T16:55:29+02:00 Psychosocial predictors of weight loss among American Indian and Alaska Native participants in a diabetes prevention translational project Dill, Edward J. Manson, Spero M. Jiang, Luohua Pratte, Katherine A. Gutilla, Margaret J. Knepper, Stephanie L. Beals, Janette Roubideaux, Yvette Special Diabetes Program for Indians Diabetes Prevention Demonstration Project Aurora (Colo.) 2015-04-13 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10968/1164 English eng eng University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. Strauss Health Sciences Library Hindawi Publishing: Journal of Diabetes Research Print #M127. Psychosocial predictors of weight loss among American Indian and Alaska Native participants in a diabetes prevention translational project. 13 April 2015 Health Sciences Library Photograph Collection and Special Collections, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus; Publications. Dill, Edward J., Manson, Spero M., Jiang, Luohua, Pratte, Katherine A., Gutilla, Margaret J., Knepper, Stephanie L., Beals, Janette, Roubideaux, Yvette, Special Diabetes Program for Indians Diabetes Prevention Demonstration Project, Psychosocial predictors of weight loss among American Indian and Alaska Native participants in a diabetes prevention translational project. Hindawi Publishing: Journal of Diabetes Research. Article ID 324168 http://hdl.handle.net/10968/1164 Copyright of the original work is retained by the author(s). This article was created with the support of the Open Access Fund Program, formerly available through the Strauss Health Sciences Library, an initiative that helped to finance the author processing fees of OA journals. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. CC-BY Psychology Diabetes Mellitus Prediabetic State Indians North American Inuits Text 2015 ftmountainschol 2022-03-07T21:18:29Z Includes bibliographic references. The association of psychosocial factors (psychological distress, coping skills, family support, trauma exposure, and spirituality) with initial weight and weight loss among American Indians and Alaska Natives (AI/Ans) in a diabetes prevention translational project was investigated. Participants (n = 3,135) were confirmed as prediabetic and subsequently enrolled in the Special Diabetes Program for Indians Diabetes Prevention (SDPI-DP) demonstration project implemented at 36 Indian health care programs. Measures were obtained at baseline and after completing a 16-session educational curriculum focusing on weight loss through behavioral changes. At baseline, psychological distress and negative family support were linked to greater weight, whereas cultural spirituality was correlated with lower weight. Furthermore, psychological distress and negative family support predicted less weight loss, and positive family support predicted greater weight loss, over the course of the intervention. These bivariate relationships between psychosocial factors and weight remained statistically significant within a multivariate model, after controlling for sociodemographic characteristics. Conversely, coping skills and trauma exposure were not significantly associated with baseline weight or change in weight. These findings demonstrate the influence of psychosocial factors on weight loss in AI/AN communities and have substantial implications for incorporating adjunctive intervention components. Text inuits Alaska Mountain Scholar (Digital Collections of Colorado and Wyoming) Indian |
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Open Polar |
collection |
Mountain Scholar (Digital Collections of Colorado and Wyoming) |
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ftmountainschol |
language |
English |
topic |
Psychology Diabetes Mellitus Prediabetic State Indians North American Inuits |
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Psychology Diabetes Mellitus Prediabetic State Indians North American Inuits Dill, Edward J. Manson, Spero M. Jiang, Luohua Pratte, Katherine A. Gutilla, Margaret J. Knepper, Stephanie L. Beals, Janette Roubideaux, Yvette Psychosocial predictors of weight loss among American Indian and Alaska Native participants in a diabetes prevention translational project |
topic_facet |
Psychology Diabetes Mellitus Prediabetic State Indians North American Inuits |
description |
Includes bibliographic references. The association of psychosocial factors (psychological distress, coping skills, family support, trauma exposure, and spirituality) with initial weight and weight loss among American Indians and Alaska Natives (AI/Ans) in a diabetes prevention translational project was investigated. Participants (n = 3,135) were confirmed as prediabetic and subsequently enrolled in the Special Diabetes Program for Indians Diabetes Prevention (SDPI-DP) demonstration project implemented at 36 Indian health care programs. Measures were obtained at baseline and after completing a 16-session educational curriculum focusing on weight loss through behavioral changes. At baseline, psychological distress and negative family support were linked to greater weight, whereas cultural spirituality was correlated with lower weight. Furthermore, psychological distress and negative family support predicted less weight loss, and positive family support predicted greater weight loss, over the course of the intervention. These bivariate relationships between psychosocial factors and weight remained statistically significant within a multivariate model, after controlling for sociodemographic characteristics. Conversely, coping skills and trauma exposure were not significantly associated with baseline weight or change in weight. These findings demonstrate the influence of psychosocial factors on weight loss in AI/AN communities and have substantial implications for incorporating adjunctive intervention components. |
author2 |
Special Diabetes Program for Indians Diabetes Prevention Demonstration Project |
format |
Text |
author |
Dill, Edward J. Manson, Spero M. Jiang, Luohua Pratte, Katherine A. Gutilla, Margaret J. Knepper, Stephanie L. Beals, Janette Roubideaux, Yvette |
author_facet |
Dill, Edward J. Manson, Spero M. Jiang, Luohua Pratte, Katherine A. Gutilla, Margaret J. Knepper, Stephanie L. Beals, Janette Roubideaux, Yvette |
author_sort |
Dill, Edward J. |
title |
Psychosocial predictors of weight loss among American Indian and Alaska Native participants in a diabetes prevention translational project |
title_short |
Psychosocial predictors of weight loss among American Indian and Alaska Native participants in a diabetes prevention translational project |
title_full |
Psychosocial predictors of weight loss among American Indian and Alaska Native participants in a diabetes prevention translational project |
title_fullStr |
Psychosocial predictors of weight loss among American Indian and Alaska Native participants in a diabetes prevention translational project |
title_full_unstemmed |
Psychosocial predictors of weight loss among American Indian and Alaska Native participants in a diabetes prevention translational project |
title_sort |
psychosocial predictors of weight loss among american indian and alaska native participants in a diabetes prevention translational project |
publisher |
University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. Strauss Health Sciences Library |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10968/1164 |
op_coverage |
Aurora (Colo.) |
geographic |
Indian |
geographic_facet |
Indian |
genre |
inuits Alaska |
genre_facet |
inuits Alaska |
op_relation |
Print #M127. Psychosocial predictors of weight loss among American Indian and Alaska Native participants in a diabetes prevention translational project. 13 April 2015 Health Sciences Library Photograph Collection and Special Collections, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus; Publications. Dill, Edward J., Manson, Spero M., Jiang, Luohua, Pratte, Katherine A., Gutilla, Margaret J., Knepper, Stephanie L., Beals, Janette, Roubideaux, Yvette, Special Diabetes Program for Indians Diabetes Prevention Demonstration Project, Psychosocial predictors of weight loss among American Indian and Alaska Native participants in a diabetes prevention translational project. Hindawi Publishing: Journal of Diabetes Research. Article ID 324168 http://hdl.handle.net/10968/1164 |
op_rights |
Copyright of the original work is retained by the author(s). This article was created with the support of the Open Access Fund Program, formerly available through the Strauss Health Sciences Library, an initiative that helped to finance the author processing fees of OA journals. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. |
op_rightsnorm |
CC-BY |
_version_ |
1766046475298537472 |