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Barriers to and enablers of attendance at diabetic retinopathy screening experienced by immigrants to Canada from multiple cultural and linguistic minority groups
Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
- van Allen, Zack (Author)
- Dogba, Maman Joyce. (Author)
- Brent, Michael. H. (Author)
- Bach, Catherine (Author)
- Grimshaw, Jeremy. M. (Author)
- Ivers, Noah. M. (Author)
- Wang, Xiaoqin. (Author)
- McCleary, Nicola. (Author)
- Asad, Sarah. (Author)
- Chorghay, Zahraa. (Author)
- Hakim, Hina (Author)
- Sutakovic, Olivera (Author)
- Drescher, Olivia (Author)
- Légaré, France (Author)
- Witteman, Holly. O. (Author)
- Zettl, Mary (Author)
- Squires, Janet (Author)
- Tremblay, Marie-Claude (Author)
- Randhawa, Arshad (Author)
- Lopez, Gladys (Author)
- Ben Guiza, Afifa (Author)
- Presseau, Justin (Author)
Title
Barriers to and enablers of attendance at diabetic retinopathy screening experienced by immigrants to Canada from multiple cultural and linguistic minority groups
Abstract
Aim
To identify barriers to/enablers of attendance at eye screening among three groups of immigrantsto Canada from cultural/linguistic minority groups living with diabetes.
Methods
Using a patient-oriented research approach leveraging Diabetes Action Canada's patient engagement platform, we interviewed a purposeful sample of people with type 2 diabetes who had immigrated to Canada from: Pakistan (interviews in Urdu), China (interviews in Mandarin) and French-speaking African and Caribbean nations (interviews in French). We collected and analysed data based on the Theoretical Domains Framework covering key modifiable factors that may operate as barriers to or enablers of attending eye screening. We used directed content analysis to code barrier/enabler domains. Barriers/enablers were mapped to behaviour change techniques to inform future intervention development.
Results
We interviewed 39 people (13 per group). Many barriers/enablers were consistent across groups, including views about harms caused by screening itself, practical appointment issues including forgetting, screening costs, wait times and making/getting to an appointment, lack of awareness about retinopathy screening, language barriers, and family and clinical support. Group-specific barriers/enablers included a preference to return to one's country of birth for screening, the impact of winter, and preferences for alternative medicine.
Conclusion
Our results can inform linguistic and culturally competent interventions to support immigrants living with diabetes in attending eye screening to prevent avoidable blindness.
Publication
Diabetic medicine
Date
2020
Volume
38
Issue
4
Pages
1-13
Language
en
Citation
van Allen, Z., Dogba, M. Joyce., Brent, Michael. H., Bach, C., Grimshaw, Jeremy. M., Ivers, Noah. M., Wang, Xiaoqin., McCleary, Nicola., Asad, Sarah., Chorghay, Zahraa., Hakim, H., Sutakovic, O., Drescher, O., Légaré, F., Witteman, Holly. O., Zettl, M., Squires, J., Tremblay, M.-C., Randhawa, A., … Presseau, J. (2020). Barriers to and enablers of attendance at diabetic retinopathy screening experienced by immigrants to Canada from multiple cultural and linguistic minority groups. Diabetic Medicine, 38(4), 1–13. https://doi.org/10.1111/dme.14429
Area of intervention or study
Minority language group(s)
Study population
Country
Research type
- Qualitative
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