Mil Familias Cohort Establishment: a Study to Understand Determinants of Diabetes and Its Complications Among US Latinos
Last updated on July 2021Recruitment
- Recruitment Status
- Enrolling by invitation
- Estimated Enrollment
- Same as current
Summary
- Conditions
- Cardiovascular Diseases
- Type2 Diabetes Mellitus
- Type
- Observational
- Design
- Observational Model: CohortTime Perspective: Cross-Sectional
Participation Requirements
- Age
- Between 7 years and 125 years
- Gender
- Both males and females
Description
The vision of Mil Familias is to reduce the burden of cardio-metabolic disease among Latino families in Santa Barbara County and beyond. The aim is to establish an observational cohort of 1,000 Latino families, with at least one family member currently living with diabetes, in order to understand be...
The vision of Mil Familias is to reduce the burden of cardio-metabolic disease among Latino families in Santa Barbara County and beyond. The aim is to establish an observational cohort of 1,000 Latino families, with at least one family member currently living with diabetes, in order to understand better the impact of the 5 determinants of human health (genetics, biology, behavior, psychology, and society/environment) in this population. Once the 1,000-family cohort is established, evidence-based intervention studies will be developed and implemented based on new knowledge, with collaborators from the healthcare, public policy, academic, pharmaceutical, medical device and technology industries. The strategy involves 4 coordinated and iterative components to achieve its mission: Especialistas: Trusted, bilingual community health workers specially-trained in diabetes education, clinical research methodologies, and care referral. The Especialistas will engage directly with participants to conduct research activities, answer questions, and when necessary, refer participants to appropriate, local community resources. Data: Facilitated by Especialistas, each individual participant will contribute information on up to 100 different variables relating to their genetics, biology, psychology, behavior and society/environment, thus creating a one-of-a-kind database and associated specimen biobank on Latino health and lifestyle ("Living Information Bank"). Interventions: Based on the data, evidence-based, collaborative, culturally-relevant prevention and treatment strategies are planned to develop once the cohort of 1,000 families has been established. Allies: This community-based participatory research study requires engagement from key stakeholders from the Latino community, healthcare sectors, hospitals, payers, businesses, people with diabetes and philanthropists. Organizations and individuals support Mil Familias by contributing their resources, experiences, and skill-sets.
Tracking Information
- NCT #
- NCT03830840
- Collaborators
- Eli Lilly and Company
- Investigators
- Principal Investigator: David Kerr, M.D. Sansum Diabetes Research Institute