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Diabetes Care 24:1498, 2001
© 2001 by the American Diabetes Association, Inc.


Letters: Observations
Letter

Internalized Racism Is Associated With Glucose Intolerance Among Black Americans in the U.S. Virgin Islands

Eugene S. Tull, DRPH MT and Earle C. Chambers, MPH

Minority International Research Training Program, Department of Epidemiology, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

The possible causes of the higher frequency of type 2 diabetes in African-Americans compared with European-Americans has generated much interest. Conventional wisdom might suggest that the disadvantaged socioeconomic position of African-Americans and their increased genetic susceptibility as a group account for the higher incidence of the disease. However, when socioeconomic factors are controlled for the excess, type 2 diabetes risk for African-Americans remains (1). Is this excess risk due solely to a difference in genetic susceptibility? Although genetic susceptibility is likely contributory, risk factors operating perhaps exclusively in the African-American population may also contribute to the unexplained excess of type 2 diabetes in that group.

Bjorntorp (2) hypothesizes that certain individuals who are prone to defeat-oriented responses to environmental stressors may exhibit a dysfunctional response of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis to stress, resulting in abdominal obesity and metabolic abnormalities including glucose intolerance. This hypothesis has captured our interest regarding its implication for African-Americans. We previously demonstrated in African-Caribbean individuals (3) that internalized racism (4) (i.e., the extent to which blacks agree with racist stereotypes attributed to them) is associated with increased levels of dysphoria and abdominal obesity independent of BMI. To determine whether internalized racism might also be related to glucose intolerance, we conducted a nested case-control study as part of a larger study of diabetes risk factors in the U.S. Virgin Islands (USVI).

Participants were non-Hispanic blacks >=20 years of age recruited from randomly selected households on the island of St. Croix in the USVI. Fasting blood samples were drawn from all of them. Between November 1999 and February 2000, 27 subjects with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes (5) and 55 nondiabetic control subjects were recruited. The two groups were frequency matched by age and sex. The distribution of internalized racism scores was divided into high and low levels based on a median split. Each participant signed a consent form approved by the University of Pittsburgh Institutional Review Board.

The study results showed no significant difference between case subjects and control subjects with respect to age (58.7 ± 11.2 vs. 58.1 ± 10.9 years, respectively), sex (51.9 vs. 56.4% female, respectively), or high school completion (44.4 vs. 41.8%, respectively). However, case subjects had a higher level of both internalized racism (63 vs. 40%, odds ratio = 2.5; P = 0.050) and mean hostility score (75.5 vs. 66.3, P = 0.0008) than control subjects. In the entire cohort, internalized racism and hostility score (6) were highly correlated (r = 0.53; P = 0.0001).

The current study suggests that internalized racism is associated with glucose intolerance among African-Americans in the USVI. It might be hypothesized that internalized racism may be a marker of abnormal HPA function and the cascade of metabolic abnormalities reported by Bjorntorp et al. (7). Its relationship to type 2 diabetes may signal the important contribution of a psychosocial stress–mediated pathway in the etiology of type 2 diabetes in African-Americans. Given estimates that 15–50% of African-Americans in the continental U.S. may have high internalized racism (8), additional study in this area is recommended.

FOOTNOTES

Address correspondence to Dr. Eugene S. Tull, Graduate School of Public Health, 512 Parran Hall, 130 DeSoto St., Pittsburgh, PA 15261. E-mail: est{at}.pitt.edu.

References

  1. Cowie CC, Harris MI, Silverman RE, Johnson EW, Rust KF: Effect of multiple risk factors on differences between blacks and whites in the prevalence of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in the United States. Am J Epidemiol 137:719–732, 1993[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  2. Bjorntorp P: The associations between obesity, adipose tissue distribution and disease. Acta Med Scand Suppl 723:121–134, 1988[Medline]
  3. Tull ES, Wickramasuriya T, Taylor J, Smith-Burns V, Brown M, Champagnie G, Daye K, Donaldson K, Solomon N, Walker S, Fraser H, Jordan O: Relationship of internalized racism to abdominal obesity and blood pressure in Afro-Caribbean women. J Natl Med Assoc 9:447–451, 1999
  4. Taylor J, Grundy C: Measuring black internalization of white stereotypes about blacks: the Nadanolitization Scale. In Handbook of Tests and Measurements for Black Populations. Jones RL, Ed. Hampton, VA, Cobb and Henry, 1996, p. 217–221
  5. The Expert Committee on the Diagnosis and Classification of Diabetes Mellitus: Report of the Expert Committee on the Diagnosis and Classification of Diabetes Mellitus. Diabetes Care 20:1183–1197, 1997[Medline]
  6. Barefoot JC, Dodge KA, Peterson BL, Dahlstrom WG, Williams RB Jr: The Cook-Medley hostility scale: item content and ability to predict survival. Psychosom Med 51:46–57, 1989[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  7. Bjorntorp P, Holm G, Rosmond R: Hypothalamic arousal, insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes mellitus. Diabet Med 16:373–383, 1999[Medline]
  8. Taylor J: Cultural conversion experiences: implication for mental health research and treatments. In African American Identity Development 2. Jones RL, Ed. Hampton, VA, Cobb and Henry, 1998, p. 85–95

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