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diabetes minority youth
UAB is one of 15 sites selected by the NIH to study the increasing prevalence of diabetes in youth, specifically in Black and Hispanic minority groups.

The prevalence of Type 2 diabetes in youth is increasing in the United States, primarily among minorities, with Black and Hispanic youth showing the greatest increase. Neither the reason for the increase nor the mechanism underlying the disproportionate risk in minority youth is known.

Researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham have received more than $3.7 million from the National Institutes of Health to study the increasing prevalence of diabetes in youth as part of a nationwide consortium. Barbara Gower, Ph.D., interim chair and professor in the UAB Department of Nutrition Sciences, and Ambika Ashraf, M.D., director of the Division of Pediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes at UAB and Children’s of Alabama, will lead the UAB site.

The study is part of a project designed to identify the predictors of Type 2 diabetes in youth. UAB, located in the United States diabetes belt and home to the UAB Comprehensive Diabetes Center and Diabetes Research Center, was one of 15 institutions selected to participate. 

“Our research aims to further understand health disparities in diabetes prevalence, as well as study the impact of particular risk factors on the conversion of pre-diabetes to Type 2 diabetes,” Ashraf said. “This knowledge would allow us to better treat children, especially minority children, who have prediabetes.”

Prediabetes is a serious health condition where blood sugar levels are higher than normal, but not high enough yet to be diagnosed as Type 2 diabetes.

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