Kaiser Permanente finds partners of newly diagnosed diabetes patients more likely to adopt healthy behaviors

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NBHC Population Health
July 09, 2018

Kaiser Permanente reports that partners of people with newly diagnosed diabetes are more likely to improve their health behaviours than partners of people without the disease. Kaiser researchers say a diabetes diagnosis could be a 'teachable moment' to encourage healthy lifestyles and improve health habits. The analysis matched each person newly diagnosed with diabetes and their co-residing partner with five persons without diabetes and their co-residing partners, and assessed changes in eight health behaviours for a year pre­- and post-diagnosis. Among the findings:

  • Partners of people with type 2 diabetes were about 50% more likely to take a weight management class, and they were 25% more likely to take smoking cessation medication, compared to similar partners of people without type 2 diabetes; and
  • The likelihood that partners of people with diabetes would participate in other health behaviours - glucose screening, clinically meaningful weight loss, lipid screening, influenza vaccination and blood pressure screening - was between 2% and 7% higher, when compared to partners of people without diabetes.

Related News:
Editorial: Teachable moments for patients, practices, and systems - Annals of Family Medicine
Diabetes diagnosis 'silver lining'? Other family members' health may improve - HealthDay

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