A Qualitative Exploration of Fijian Perceptions of Diabetes: Identifying Opportunities for Prevention and Management
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Knowledge and Awareness of Diabetes
3.2. Culturally Specific Barriers to Preventing or Controlling Diabetes
3.3. Structures That Could Be Leveraged to Prevent Diabetes and Its Complications
3.4. Recommended Components of Interventions
4. Discussion
5. Strengths and Limitations
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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i-Taukei Characteristics | Male, n = 8 | Female, n = 7 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Range | Mean | Range | Mean | |
Age (years) | 36–71 | 50 | 26–55 | 46 |
Years in Australia * | 7–37 | 24 | 7–24 | 16 |
Marital status | ||||
Married | 6 | 6 | ||
Single or widowed | 2 | 1 | ||
Birth country | ||||
Fiji | 7 | 7 | ||
Australia | 1 | - | ||
Diabetes diagnosis | ||||
Yes | 2 | - | ||
No | 6 | 7 | ||
Highest level of education | ||||
University | 4 | 4 | ||
Certificate/Diploma | 4 | 2 | ||
High school | - | 1 | ||
Employment status | ||||
Full time | 7 | 6 | ||
Part time | - | 1 | ||
Retired | 1 | - |
Sub Theme | Example Excerpts |
---|---|
Knowledge of common health problems | E1.1a: The most common one that they would have is, um is obesity. Obesity. Along with obesity, one that is common is the kidney, kidney dialysis…one that follows with heart problems is um stroke. (50 years old, male) |
E1.1b: Lifestyle, especially heart diseases…yeah, NCD’s, non-communicable diseases. So they call it, lifestyle diseases. One of them is diabetes. (45 years old, male) | |
E1.1c: One, number one is diabetes. A lot of our families and friends now have that…I would say heart, number two. Yeah, cholesterol too. (49 years old, female) | |
E1.1d: The main common things that I know for Fijians, either they got diabetes, high blood pressure or heart [disease]. (47 years old, male) | |
Diabetes in the family | E1.2a: A lot of our families and friends now have that [diabetes]. Ahh people I’m close to yeah. With um, that have ahh can say maybe five I can name with my... the top of my head who are now taking insulin injections. (49 years old, female) |
E1.2b: So, I think that’s the thing, yeah, I’ve got lots of family that have diabetes. (36 years old, male) | |
Understanding of diabetes | E1.3a: I know diabetes is when your body does not process sugar in the way that it should. So, it produces, so it doesn’t process insulin, um in the way that it should. (48 years old, female) |
E1.3b: We have a health and wellbeing [missing word] at work and they come and talk to us about um eating healthy and what type 2 diabetes is and how it can be managed yeah…looking for type 2 diabetes, is your diet and your exercise. And that’s the way I can treat it, um to manage it. (47 years old, male). | |
E1.3c: No, not technically, I just sort of know it as like a, like the way it’s used and thrown around and I know the really bad stereotypes. (26 years old, female) | |
E1.3d: But I think knowledge is very limited in regard to what it actually... how it manifests and how it actually is ahh represented in the way in which people ahh live healthy lifestyles either type 1 or type 2. (36 years old, male) | |
Causes of diabetes | E1.4a: Type 2 is more connected to your health. Well both are connected to your health, but people may have type 2 as a result of their diet and nutrition…It’s something that is preventable; that it does impact your wellbeing. It is related to weight and obesity. (36 years old, male) |
E1.4b: Lifestyle, I think is really important, food is for me, food is your 80% there. And then the other 20% is exercise…the culture aspect is around habits that have been passed down. And that is: unhealthy diet, overconsumption, choices of food. (46 years old, male) | |
E1.4c: Poor diet, not a lot of exercise…Everything contributes to healthy living, like exercise, it’s not only diet, because your, your activity that you do; there’s so much more than just diet contributes to having diabetes. (50 years old, female) | |
E1.4d: Yeah, it’s the ahh like I said the lifestyle um no exercise, lack of sleep, eating um different times of the day. (49 years old, female) | |
E1.4e: So, I would say eating lots of refined things, um an imbalance in the amount of sugar you’re taking in and burning off and the types of sugar probably. (26 years old, female) | |
E1.4f: That’s what causes it, like too much carbohydrates, that’s sugar. (71 years old, male) | |
E1.4g: But that [diet] contributes to our health, that we lack to understand that it does contribute to our health. (45 years old, male) | |
E1.4h: Um, I think there would be very few people who would look after their diet, very few I would think. So, yeah, if there is awareness, would that change it? (48 years old, female) | |
E1.4i: I mean I don’t touch McDonald’s or KFC, I ahh, I just can see it’s, it’s just a food that’s gonna kill us. (49 years old, female) | |
Consequences of diabetes | E1.5a: Some people can get amputated, amputation that’s all I know. (47 years old, male) |
E1.5b: The consequences of diabetes, is the family. Like my aunt, my uncle was amputated. He was in a wheelchair. (45 years old, male) | |
E1.5c: Yeah amputation, people feel isolated, psychologically because they know they’ve been you know, they got diabetes. (45 years old, male) | |
E1.5d: You have to then take medication for having to look after your condition…the impact on your quality of life. (46 years old, male) | |
E1.5e: I’ve got two uncles there [Fiji], they’ve got diabetes. Yeah, they’ve amputated their foot. And my brother’s got diabetes. (50 years old, male) (his uncle, he was a taxi driver (49 years old, female)) …cos they amputated his leg…he can’t drive. (50 years old, male) | |
Diabetes is a major health concern for Fijians | E1.6a: Diabetes is quite common. Quite common like in Fijian community [laughter]. I know there’s a lot of yeah diabetes. (47 years old, male) |
E1.6b: Cos diabetes right now, it’s so common in Fiji that I am sure, like most Fijians here would have relatives back home who have diabetes. (49 years old, female) | |
E1.6c: It is [an] epidemic [diabetes], it is a big concern. (46 years old, male) | |
E1.6d: [health problems in Fiji], they’re changing. And the lifestyle, one of the areas, one of the diseases is now growing is heart disease. And heart disease comes with diabetes, so these are two good friends. And they’re normally associated with lifestyle, the heart cases and diabetes. (45 years old, male) |
Sub Theme | Example Excerpts |
---|---|
Higher financial income increases ability to buy food | E2.1a: It’s easy to go and buy a good cut of steak, that you’ll have like a big, you have a steak each, for everyone. So, there’s more meat…and only tiny salads. So, because there’s money, you can buy, yeah. (48 years old, female) |
E2.1b: …and so instead of cooking like a pot of fish, which is probably good, you know, we’ll go get KFC, and we’ll go get pizza because it’s available, right. Because now we have the money. Like in Fiji you don’t have that kind of money. (48 years old, female) | |
Availability of fast food | E2.2a: I think that we have more ready access to other foods, um and fast foods, which again I think is an issue in itself. (36 years old, male) |
E2.2c: But for Australia, you know, especially we have the freedom of choice and the busy life, we tend to convenience, so the food is available in supermarket, why not. The food is readily available, and all those food outlets, like fast food, why not. So, the availability changes people’s lifestyle. Or convenience, because everybody’s rushing. (45 years old, male) | |
E2.2c: And so instead of cooking like a pot of fish, which is probably good, you know, we’ll go get KFC and we’ll go get pizza because it’s available, right. (48 years old, female) | |
Traditional diet being healthier | E2.3a: So, when I say culture, I don’t mean in terms of traditional Fijian culture because that actually is the savior here. So, when I go to Fiji, I eat all the traditional foods, which is unprocessed, low sugar, living off the land, you know. (46 years old, male) |
E2.3b: There is, still the, we still are having our sort of Fijian diet. Like mainly root crops and ah, the greens, like taro leaves and ah, bele and all these things. (71 years old, male) | |
E2.3c: [In Fiji] Most people eat fresh foods, either from the farm or from the sea. And um they cook their own food, so they know exactly what’s going into the pot. In here [Australia] they really don’t know, they only get a container or a plate so they really don’t know what are the ingredients. (45 years old, male) | |
Unhealthy traditional diet | E2.4a: Lots of starches. Lots of carbs, so carb loaded. Rice, dalo. Dalo is our taro. Cassava, um, bread, it’s heavily, I mean its readily available, right. (48 years old, female) |
E2.4b: We like layer things in um coconut cream and coconut sauce um and then we have lots of starches like taro and cassava, we love them. (26 years old, female) | |
E2.4c: Starchy food and, and, and people like to have fish ahh food cooked in coconut milk. (47 years old, male) | |
E2.4d: Um we eat a lot of taro and cassava um roti, curries from an array of different meats, rice, coconut everything and then some. (36 years old, male) | |
E2.4e: Very carb loaded. And very protein full as well, we eat a lot of meat. (48 years old, female) | |
Kava is consumed frequently | E2.5a: I think mainly because people drink too much kava. (71years old, male) |
E2.5b: That’s one of the effects—taking time off doing other things: sleeping, eating… because if you drink kava, you’ll spend a lot of time, so you’ll miss taking your tablets and you’ll go and eat late at night and then you’ll sleep. (55 years old, female) | |
Fijian food consumption practices | E2.6a: Let me tell you, we don’t know what moderation is really, we go “full on”. We love our food. We love our food. (48 years old, female) |
E2.6b: I think we need to be informed, how much is enough for you for the day, you know. Like, basically you don’t need all this, this is sufficient to hold you until your next meal, for your body to function. (48 years old, female) | |
E2.6c: Cook them in small amounts if amounts is a problem for you, which it is for Fijians, portions are... Fijians don’t practice portion control. (26 years old, female) | |
E2.6d: The main thing in the Island thing is, everything’s the food, it shows how wealthy to you are… When you have a function the first thing you’ll think is you know, don’t run out of food, so you gotta make sure everyone eats. [laughter] (47 years old, male) | |
Family and community influences | E2.7a: So, and but no one stops to think I shouldn’t eat that, you’re like your all together there’s like a family mentality built around food so to not eat food is like to not participate in the life of the family at that moment. (26 years old, female) |
E2.7b: You know, eat. Why? You don’t like our food? You know, you’re offending me because you’re not eating my food. What’s wrong with you? (48 years old, female) | |
E2.7c: It’s all these communal functions that you go to, gatherings, we have a lot of feasting, you know, feasting, eating at the wrong time. That’s, that’s ahh, you know Fijian—or Pacific Island functions are big you know. When we have a function it’s a big feed. (47 years old, male) | |
E2.7d: When you have a function the first thing you’ll think is you know, don’t run out of food, so you gotta make sure everyone eats. (47 years old, male) | |
Family pressure to eat | E2.8a: …there’s like a family mentality built around food, so to not eat is like to not participate in the life of the family at that moment. (26 years old, female) |
E2.8b: like today’s gathering, if there’s food I’m not supposed to eat, but because I love to indulge with my family, I’ll indulge in it. I know it’s not good for me. But I’ll still indulge in that. … But you know, I don’t want to miss out. (45 years old, male) | |
Medication | E2.9: …you know the mentality of “the medication will do the job, I can eat how I eat. Medication is there to do its job. (55 years old, female) |
Lack of awareness and understanding of diabetes | E2.10: If they’re not aware, it’s got no control…the elders is frightened to go to the doctors for medical check-up, that is their weakness… some people are scared to know what kind of sickness they have and or early signs. (47 years old, male) |
Spirituality and Traditional approaches to healthcare | E2.11a: This is the challenge, we have religion, we have our Fijian herbal medicine and then we have the doctor……we’ve been brought up with that belief. Go to church. This is our cultural thing, we believe in this, and these two are intertwined. (prayer and herbal) (45 years old, male) |
E2.11b: And the thing with us, like tablets and other medications is not our life, like we’ll resort to herbal and that’s it. But it has to become really serious, you get pains and you are serious, then you’ll follow the doctor’s orders to take it because you’re aware that you don’t want to suffer the pain and everything else. That’s lack of education for us. (50 years old, female) | |
E2.11c: Also people, when they got sickness, like they don’t want to say, it’s very private …if you have a problem, it’s in our culture that you want to solve it yourself. You either go and ask somebody quietly, or go herbal medicine, or you know, you wanna do on your own, rather than going straight to the solution. (45 years old, male). | |
Cultural perceptions of weight | E2.12a: We don’t have body shaming as an issue. Just because you’re curvier, even if you are this (indicating larger body images), you can… still seen as attractive. (46 years old, male). |
E2.12b: In a typical Fijian mind, if you’re losing weight then somethings wrong with you. It’s not like you’re trying to be health conscious, it’s you’re, like you’re just sick…I’m thinking of a traditional mind, right, the rounder, for women, that’s more attractive. (48 years old, female) | |
E2.12c: Bigger, yes, yes, prefer bigger. Because to us, if you’re skinny like this (indicating the smaller body images) they think, oh, what is he feeding his wife? Because not enough food to—if you pile on food, they bigger, you know. He’s looking after his wife. (64 years old, male) | |
E2.12d: If your child is undernourished, you’re not a good parent. You need to have a chubby baby to be a real pacific baby. (55 years old, female) |
Sub Theme | Example Excerpts |
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Maintenance of family, faith and community connections | E3.1a: We are people who gather as well; we are very communal people. (48 years old, female) |
E3.1b: I would do workshops and introduce to them new, um, using our own food crops but you know modern recipes for girls…I think we should be educated. And ah, in the community, to help one another, and do it as a group because we are communal people. (50 years old, female) | |
Leveraging connections to family to highlight impact of the disease | E3.2a: And like, if they can relate to someone close to them who has diabetes, you know, that is an encouragement for them to straighten out their lives. Well it’s, well that’s the case with me. You know, that my mum. So like when I slacken off my exercise, when I think about that, that makes me go out and… (49 years old, female) |
E3.2b: In dispersing that information I would take a really heavily family based stance, where I would outline it means early death if you’re a father, for your child it means this cause you’ll pass down your eating habits, um what it means for your wife, cause that’s what Fijians listen to... the effect that it’ll have on their families, even, not themselves. (26 years old, female) | |
E3.2c: Run specific campaigns on educating family members, and their role and responsibility in helping their family member with diabetes would be helpful. As you know Pacific including indigenous Fijians are very communally orientated so having that context, I think would be helpful. (36 years old, male) | |
Whole of family approach | E3.3a: You have to actually encourage their families, you know, to support them, you know. Maybe eat the right food that they supposed to eat…Like how this thing, how it actually starts. Cos I think, like diabetes, it doesn’t start like just overnight. It takes a while. Yeah, so I think, educating even like our young kids, very very important (49 years old, female) |
E3.3b: Um, you know education in schools. Programs in schools. I don’t know, check lunch boxes and things like that. (48 years old, female) | |
E3.3c: Because you know, it’s going to be really hard for them eating those, sometimes tasteless food which is supposed to be good for them, while the rest of the family is, you know, enjoying those taro, pork and all those fatty things. (49 years old, female) | |
E3.3d: You are able to speak to them and encourage them, that you preparing what… its and teaching your children good health habits, good foods. Preparing good lunches. (55 years old, female) | |
Spiritual connections | E3.4a: I would probably throw something spiritual in there, you know how the bible says to take care of your whole self, not just turn up to church and do these things (26 years old, female) |
E3.4b: Coming from a biblical perspective, from a Christian world view. Yeah… Yeah, that would be a good way. Oh, start off with Biblical scripture…. Away we go. (50 years old, male) | |
Church is integral in everyday life | E3.5a: Especially more so if they’re going to a church where the Fijian community is, so if there’s a strong Fijian cultural community there’s heaps of loyalty to that, to that priest and that church and I guess that priest would exercise some sort of influence. (26 years old, female) |
E3.5b: Churches yeah cause that’s a good number [of people]. Everyone goes to church. [laughter] (49 years old, female) | |
Church leading by example | E3.6: First of all it’s the church leaders them self they should be worried about their diet, that, they are the, if you look at the some of these preachers and some of these priests and all, their lifestyle is not good so they’re the first person who should be, you know, as an example. (47 years old, male) |
Social structures for intervention delivery | E3.7a: One is through church, one is if there’s ahh through family functions, relatives, yeah family functions, um or friends, just normal Fijian friends meet together…And what we just try, it’s more talking about, instead of talking about a useless thing we’ll talk about ahh our ah health and wellbeing. Then maybe we can pass on just by all while drinking kava, instead of talking nonsense people talking about this. (47 years old, male) |
E3.7b: You need to go to the church elders. Then the church elders will take it down to their little cell group meetings. Then from the cell group meetings, they’ll take it down to their families, to their children…or you can take it to the youth group meetings. (50 years old, male) | |
Raising awareness of diabetes | E3.8a: Also, the use of you know, social media…. Either a newspaper, television or, there’s supposed to be a lot of promotion on ah diabetes. What are the ways to detect it, what are the solutions there. Who you can visit. The steps to avoid it. (45 years old, male) |
E3.8b: One of the biggest gatherings is Fiji day, it gathers about close to 10,000 people. That’s an annual thing…there are a couple of Facebook pages, Sydney Facebook pages. There’s a few radio stations…because the older people will be listening to Fijian radio, right. The younger people, social media. (48 years old, female) | |
E3.8c: One of the most well attended community event in Sydney is Fiji day, where it’s now … grown to be more than just Fijians which is great… it’s an opportunity to definitely um run those sort of stalls not just to give out pamphlets but also to encourage people to have a conversation. (36 years old, male) |
Sub Theme | Example Excerpts |
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Nutrition advice | E4.1a: Um for the younger generations definitely looking at the nutrition stuff that’s in the context of [excuse me] healthy living. (36 years old, male) |
E4.1b: Similar to that you can just have foods that are good for you and stay away from, I went to the hospital also last month to visit my cousin who has diabetes. They had a stall there and all the foods, all the drinks that to be avoided, they had it all there on the table and the good foods. (49 years old, female) | |
E4.1c: We need to be informed, how much [food] is enough for you for the day, you know. Like basically, you don’t need all this. (48 years old, female) | |
E4.1d: Like we’ve given you suggestions of what you can eat and things that you guys actually like, maybe just cook them a different way or cook them in small amounts if amounts is a problem for you. (26 years old, female) | |
Scare tactics to raise awareness | E4.2a: You have to—sometimes, my people, the Fijians, they are a tough nut to crack. So some of times you have to scare them with the words. (55 years old, female) |
E4.2b: I think it’s just tell them straight, the consequences you’re gonna have. (64 years old, male) | |
E4.2c: Maybe some drastic thing, so if you want to eat taro, this is what happens. Yeah something like that, that can attract attention because the passive approach won’t happen, won’t change minds. We’re too comfortable. (48 years old, female) | |
E4.2d: We know all that sort of stuff, so I think it’s more around education programs around the realness of diabetes. (36 years old, male) | |
Increasing physical activity | E4.3a: …well, you know, be more active around the house. Cleaning and you know [laughing]. (50 years old, male) |
E4.3b: Like, back to the church, incorporate that, you know, into the church. Where maybe within the ladies group, to encourage them to…(49 years old, female)… Like in the morning before they go, you know, after their prayer meeting, go for a walk: One hour walk, half an hour, 45 minutes. Go to the park… Um. Take the kids with them, go walking with the kids. (50 years old, male) | |
E4.3c: Oh, probably just a simple, like we have at work, a pedometer challenge… but by having something simple as walking, with a pedometer, you not only recording it, you using your smart phone... So by doing that, everyone will be competing. Oh look, I beat you, I beat you. (45 years old, male) | |
Common understandings | E4.4: Some people will look at things, they will go, oh yeah, but that’s a white person. You know, they don’t know my lifestyle. So then they just, that’s how you explain it away. But if you can then bring somebody to them, and have a conversation that they understand, about things that matter, then they will see if. Otherwise it’s foreign, right. (46 years old, male) |
Community involvement in intervention | E4.5a: Fijians in Australia, just by my own experience probably find influence in other Fijians who seem to make it in the community, so sports star; rugby league, rugby union, um boys that make it to that level are really heralded as successes and things to look up to. (26 years old, female) |
E4.5b: Invite a nurse from Westmead, the Fijian nurse from Westmead, just to come and talk about health issues …get someone, a professional from there, a dietitian who’d understand our food, and you know, can talk about it. (48 years old, female) | |
E4.5c: But there are, um, there are some community leaders as well, who are nonreligious. But it’s probably because either their political affiliation or a chiefly status, that will make them be seen as a leader. (48 years old, female) | |
Community advocates and peer support | E4.6a: You know, can use people that have gone through taking medication and talking from experience. Because some people will say, oh I don’t wanna take this medication because blah blah. You know, convincing other people not to take, oh you take other things. But then this person would say, you know, I’ve lived with diabetic and it has controlled my sugar like for 50 years, in fact, if I can do it, you can do it. Use those resource persons and plus those victims. (50 years old, female) |
E4.6b: I think the best thing is its coming from each individual, to share. Because most of our families here are suffering the—they share what advice they can give…it’s [more] powerful than reading books. Than who is not a sufferer. (64 years old, male) | |
E4.6c: People have to see things to get motivated. If they just hear it they say “oh, what is this?” So, when they see things that’s goanna probably cause them some issues, people tend to act. So, for us, the act is the problem. (45 years old, male) |
Suggestion | Explanation |
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Awareness raising related to diabetes and obesity | Utilize Fijian radio, Fijian Facebook pages and a stall at Fiji Day in Sydney. Develop messages in consultation with influential leaders from the Fijian community. Images of healthy body weight i-Taukei, or other indigenous Pacific Islanders, could help people to self-assess their own risk more realistically and objectively, rather than comparing within their community or to those in Fiji. |
Education | Provide general health awareness education to increase health literacy. Provide more in-depth understanding of diabetes: How it develops, can be prevented and managed, and potential complications. Endorsement needed by community leaders, in particular church leaders. Include information related to improved diet and increased physical activity. Ask those currently living with diabetes to share their experiences: People whose diabetes is well controlled as well as people who have experienced complications. |
Religious and family context | Incorporate the Fijian approach of prayer, herbal and medicine into education sessions. E.g., church leaders could introduce sessions with relevant bible passages to provide motivation for behavior change. Highlight potential impact on families of a diagnosis of diabetes. |
Skill development suggestions | Cooking workshops demonstrating healthier food options and cooking techniques, tailored to the Fijian palate. Use ubiquitous communal lunches after Sunday church services as an opportunity to present healthier food and introduce it to a wider group to support community wide change. Provide support for growing vegetables at home or in a community garden which could be effective given the communal nature of Fijian people. For people living in units, planter boxes that can be set up on balcony spaces could be provided with seeds to grow vegetables, and instruction on how to set this up and keep it going. |
Cultural activities with a twist | Incorporate regular sharing of diabetes or health-related information during informal chats ‘around the kava bowl’, rather than just talking “nonsense”. Identify community champions to initiate the process, to raise awareness about diabetes and its complications and allow sharing of what they have found to be effective ways to manage the challenges of their condition. Facilitate a trained coach from the community to support community champions. |
© 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Dearie, C.; Dubois, S.; Simmons, D.; MacMillan, F.; McBride, K.A. A Qualitative Exploration of Fijian Perceptions of Diabetes: Identifying Opportunities for Prevention and Management. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 1100. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16071100
Dearie C, Dubois S, Simmons D, MacMillan F, McBride KA. A Qualitative Exploration of Fijian Perceptions of Diabetes: Identifying Opportunities for Prevention and Management. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2019; 16(7):1100. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16071100
Chicago/Turabian StyleDearie, Catherine, Shamieka Dubois, David Simmons, Freya MacMillan, and Kate A. McBride. 2019. "A Qualitative Exploration of Fijian Perceptions of Diabetes: Identifying Opportunities for Prevention and Management" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 7: 1100. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16071100
APA StyleDearie, C., Dubois, S., Simmons, D., MacMillan, F., & McBride, K. A. (2019). A Qualitative Exploration of Fijian Perceptions of Diabetes: Identifying Opportunities for Prevention and Management. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 16(7), 1100. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16071100