3,022
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Review Article (Scoping and Systematic)

Walking in two worlds with type 2 diabetes: a scoping review of prevention and management practices incorporating traditional indigenous approaches

, ORCID Icon, , , ORCID Icon, , , , , ORCID Icon, , ORCID Icon, & ORCID Icon show all
Article: 2141182 | Received 31 May 2022, Accepted 25 Oct 2022, Published online: 10 Nov 2022

References

  • Health Canada Office of Nutrition Policy and Promotion. (2019). The New Food Guide. Retrieved 2022 Jul 18, from https://www.canada.ca/content/dam/hc-sc/documents/services/canada-food-guide/resources/stakeholder-toolkit/canada-food-guide-presentation-eng.pdf
  • Anishinawbe Health Toronto. (2022). Services. Retrieved 2022 Jul 27, from https://aht.ca/our-services/
  • Centre for Addiction and Mental Health. (nd.). Building your medicine bundle: understanding your mental health journey. [Tip sheet]. [cited 2021 Jun 28]. https://indspire.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Indspire_CAMH_TipSheet-1.pdf
  • Dart AB, Wicklow BA, Sellers EA, et al. The improving renal complications in adolescents with type 2 diabetes through the research (ICARE) Cohort Study: rationale and Protocol. Can J Diabetes. 2014;38(5):349–14.
  • Daudt HML, Van Mossel C, Scott SJ. Enhancing the scoping study methodology: a large, inter-professional team’s experience with Arksey and O’Malley’s framework. BMC Med Res Methodol. 2013;13(1):1–9.
  • Type 2 diabetes First Nations Information Governance Center. (2020). OCAP®. Retrieved 2020 Jul 21, from https://fnigc.ca/ocap
  • Conti KM. Diabetes prevention in Indian country: developing nutrition models to tell the story of food-system change. J Transcult Nurs. 2006;17(3):234–245.
  • Berry D, Samos M, Storti S, et al., Listening to concerns about Type 2 diabetes in an Native American community. J Cult Div. 2009. 16(2)
  • Coser A, Sittner KJ, Walls ML, et al. Caregiving stress among American Indians with type 2 diabetes: the importance of awareness of connectedness and family support. J Fam Nurs. 2018;24(4):621–639.
  • Dart AB, Wicklow B, Blydt-Hansen TD, et al. A Holistic Approach to Risk for Early Kidney Injury in Indigenous Youth With Type 2 Diabetes: a Proof of Concept Paper From the iCARE Cohort. Can J Kidney Health Dis. 2019;6:2054358119838836.
  • Dart A, Martens P, Rigatto C, et al. Earlier onset of complications in youth with type 2 diabetes. Diabetes Care. 2014;37(2):436–443.
  • Edwards KA, Pryor S, Jacobsen S, et al. Calorie use and obesity among diabetic and non-diabetic Mvskoke Indians. J Cult Div. 2000;7(2):36.
  • Tricco AC, Lillie E, Zarin W, et al. PRISMA extension for scoping reviews (PRISMA-ScR): checklist and explanation. Ann Intern Med. 2018;169(7):467–473.
  • King M, Smith A, Gracey M. Indigenous health part 2: the underlying causes of the health gap. Lancet. 2009;374(9683):76–85.
  • Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. (2015) Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada Calls to Action. [cited 2021 Jun 30]. Retrieved from http://www.trc.ca
  • West KM. Diabetes in American Indians and other native populations of the New World. Diabetes. 1974;23(10):841–855.
  • Jensen ET, Dabelea D. Type 2 diabetes in youth: new lessons from the SEARCH study. Curr Diab Rep. 2018;18(6):1–7.
  • Levitt Katz LE, Swami S, Abraham M, et al. Neuropsychiatric disorders at the presentation of type 2 diabetes mellitus in children. Pediatr Diabetes . 2003;6(2):84–89.
  • Dean H, Moffatt ME. Prevalence of diabetes mellitus among Indian children in Manitoba. Arct Med Res. 1988;47(1):532–534.
  • Sellers EA, Wicklow BA, Dean HJ. Clinical and demographic characteristics of type 2 diabetes in youth at diagnosis in Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario (2006–2011). Can J Diabetes. 2012;36(3):114–118.
  • Crowshoe L, Dannenbaum D, Green M, et al. Type 2 diabetes and Indigenous peoples. Can J Diabetes. 2018;42:S296–S306.
  • Naqshbandi M, Harris SB, Esler JG, et al. Global complication rates of type 2 diabetes in Indigenous peoples: a comprehensive review. Diabetes Res Clin Pract. 2008;82(1):1–17.
  • Ruth C, Sellers E, Chartrand C, et al. Type 2 Diabetes in Manitoba. Winnipeg: MB. Manitoba Centre for Health Policy; 2020.
  • Boot GR, Lowell A. Acknowledging and promoting indigenous knowledges, paradigms, and practices within health literacy-related policy and practice documents across Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. Int Indig Policy J. 2019;10(3).
  • Arksey H, O’Malley L. Scoping studies: towards a methodological framework. Int J Social Research Methodology: Theory and Practice. 2005;8(1):19–32.
  • Smylie J, Harris R, Paine SJ, et al. Beyond shame, sorrow, and apologies—action to address indigenous health inequities. bmj. 2022;8: 378.
  • Richardson L, Boozary A. Truth and reconciliation in Canada’s health system. Elsevir Ltd. United States of America: Lancet (London, England); 2021.
  • Reading CL, Wien F (2009). Health inequalities and the social determinants of Aboriginal peoples’ health.
  • Thompson HA, Mason CW, Robidoux MA. Hoop house gardening in the Wapekeka first nation as an extension of land-based food practices. Arctic. 2018;71(4):407–421.
  • Brown B, Dybdal L, Noonan C, et al. Group gardening in a native American community: a collaborative approach. Health Promot Pract. 2020;21(4):611–623.
  • Aho L, Ackerman J, Bointy S, et al. Health is life in balance: students and communities explore healthy lifestyles in a culturally based curriculum. Pimatisiwin. 2011;8(3):151.
  • Delormier T, Cargo M, Kirby R, et al., Activity implementation as a reflection of living in balance: the Kahnawake schools diabetes prevention project. J Aboriginal & Indigenous Com. 2003. 1(1)
  • Murdoch-Flowers J, Tremblay MC, Hovey R, et al. Understanding how Indigenous culturally-based interventions can improve participants’ health in Canada. Health Promot Int. 2019;34(1):154–165.
  • Potvin L, Cargo M, McComber AM, et al. Implementing participatory intervention and research in communities: lessons from the Kahnawake schools diabetes prevention project in Canada. Soc sci med. 1982;56(6):1295–1305.
  • Rosecrans AM, Gittelsohn J, Ho LS, et al. Process evaluation of a multi-institutional community-based program for diabetes prevention among First Nations. Health Educ Res. 2007;23(2):272–286.
  • Satterfield D. Health promotion and diabetes prevention in American Indian and Alaska Native communities—Traditional foods project, 2008–2014. MMWR supplements. 2016: 65
  • Gall A, Butler TL, Lawler S, et al. Traditional, complementary and integrative medicine use among Indigenous peoples with diabetes in Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the USA. Aust N Z J Public Health. 2021;1–8. DOI:10.1111/1753-6405.13120
  • Olson B. applying medical anthropology: developing diabetes education and prevention programs in American Indian cultures. Am Indian Culture Res J. 1999;23(3):185–203.
  • Smith-Morris. Community Participation in Tribal Diabetes Programs. Am Indian Culture Res J. 2006;30(2):85–110.
  • Armstrong DL. A Community Diabetes Education and Gardening Project to Improve Diabetes Care in a Northwest American Indian Tribe. Diabetes Educ. 2000;26(1):113–120.
  • Lombard KA, Forster-Cox S, Smeal D, et al. Diabetes on the Navajo nation: what role can gardening and agriculture extension play to reduce it? Rural Remote Health. 2006;6(4):1–16.
  • United Nations. (2007). United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. [cited 2021 Jun 28]. Retrieved from https://www.un.org/development/desa/indigenouspeoples/declaration-on-the-rights-of-indigenous-peoples.html
  • Abbott PA, Davison JE, Moore LF, et al. Effective Nutrition Education for Aboriginal Australians: lessons from a Diabetes Cooking Course. J Nutr Educ Behav. 2012;44(1):55–59.
  • Brown BD, Harris KJ, Harris JL, et al. Translating the Diabetes Prevention Program for Northern Plains Indian Youth Through Community-Based Participatory Research Methods. Diabetes Educ. 2010;36(6):924–935.
  • Castro S, O’Toole M, Brownson C, et al. A diabetes self-management program designed for urban American Indians. Prev Chronic Dis. 2009;6(4):A131–A131.
  • Heffernan C, Herbert C, Grams GD, et al. The Haida Gwaii Diabetes Project: planned response activity outcomes. Health Soc Care Community. 1999;7(6):379–386.
  • Hindelang M, Traditional ecological knowledge of the Lake Superior region explorations to engage students in culture scientific inquiry, and wellness activities. J Aboriginal & Indigenous Community Health. 2006. 4(2)
  • McKennitt DW, Evaluation: professional relations in Aboriginal diabetes education program at the Aboriginal diabetes wellness program. Pimatisiwin: A Journal of Aboriginal & Indigenous Community Health. 2006. 4(1)
  • Murphy E, McAuley KA, Bell D, et al. A new approach to design and implement a lifestyle intervention programme to prevent type 2 diabetes in New Zealand Maori. Asia Pac J Clin Nutr. 2003;12(4):419–422.
  • Oster RT, Grier A, Lightning R, et al. Cultural continuity, traditional Indigenous language, and diabetes in Alberta First Nations: a mixed methods study. Int J Equity Health. 2014;13(1):92–99.
  • Pilon RS, Benoit M, Maar M, et al. Decolonizing Diabetes. Int J Indigenous Health. 2019;14(2):252–275.
  • Rosas LG, Vasquez JJ, Naderi R, et al. Development and evaluation of an enhanced diabetes prevention program with psychosocial support for urban American Indians and Alaska natives: a randomized controlled trial. Contemp Clin Trials. 2016;50:28–36.
  • Tremblay MC, Bradette‐Laplante M, Witteman HO, et al. Providing culturally safe care to Indigenous people living with diabetes: identifying barriers and enablers from different perspectives. Health Expectations: International Journal of Public Participation in Health Care and Health Policy. 2021;24(2):296–306.
  • Wakani L, Bernier I, Macdonald ME, et al. Diabetes Bingo! Using participatory research to tackle diabetes with the Algonquin of Barriere Lake. 2014.
  • Eskicioglu P, Halas J, Sénéchal M, et al. Peer mentoring for type 2 diabetes prevention in first nations children. Pediatrics. 2014;133(6):e1624–e1631.
  • Kakekagumick KE, Naqshbandi Hayward M, Harris SB, et al. Sandy lake health and diabetes project: a community-based intervention targeting type 2 diabetes and its risk factors in a first nations community. Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2013;4:170.
  • Lopresti S, Willows ND, Storey KE, et al., IYMP National Team. Indigenous Youth Mentorship Program: essential characteristics of a Canadian multi-site community-university partnership with Indigenous communities. Health Promot Int. 2022;37(1):daab039.
  • Narayan KM, Hoskin M, Kozak D, et al. Randomized clinical trial of lifestyle interventions in Pima Indians: a pilot study. Diabet Med. 1998;15(1):66–72.
  • Dimeff L, Linehan MM. Dialectical behavior therapy in a nutshell. The California Psychologist. 2001;34(3):10–13.
  • Vandenbroeck B, Cree Nation O. Lives in Headingley, Manitoba. Oral teaching. Personal communication.
  • Broome. Native Americans: traditional healing. Urol Nurs. 2007;27(2):161–173.
  • DeBruyn L, Fullerton L, Satterfield D, et al. Integrating Culture and History to Promote Health and Help Prevent Type 2 Diabetes in American Indian/Alaska Native Communities: traditional Foods Have Become a Way to Talk About Health. Prev Chronic Dis. 2020;17:12.
  • Harris SB. What works? Success stories in Type 2 diabetes mellitus. Diabetic Med. 1998;15(S4 4):S20–S23.
  • Jennings D, Johnson-Jennings M, Little M. Utilizing webs to share ancestral and intergenerational teachings: the process of co-building an online digital repository in partnership with Indigenous communities. Genealogy. 2020;4(3):70.
  • Kirby AM, Lévesque L, Wabano V, A qualitative investigation of physical activity challenges and opportunities in a northern-rural, aboriginal community: voices from withiN. Pimatisiwin: A Journal of Aboriginal & Indigenous Community Health. 2007. 5(1)
  • Patten SB, Beck CA, Kassam A, et al. Long-term medical conditions and major depression: strength of association for specific conditions in the general population. Can J Psychiatry. 2005;50(4):195–202.