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Her neighbor had a foot amputated because of the disease. Her mother went blind from it. Her sister died of it.
Damage that pervasive is a common experience in the Mexican-American community, which has some of the highest rates in a surge of diabetes nationwide. The disease can provoke heart attacks, high blood pressure, kidney failure and blindness, and is the seventh-leading cause of death nationwide.
But when Medina, a 43-year-old mother of three, was diagnosed with diabetes five years ago, she decided not to let the disease exact such a heavy toll from her. The
She got coaching from a nutritionist and took free cooking classes with Kaiser doctors and at her younger daughter's school,
At various points, Medina's family resisted. But she pressed on, and now her kids and husband abide by the low-fat, soda-free, veggie-rich regime she has created. She hasn't needed to take her diabetes medication, Glipizide, in four months.
"I want to live a long time," she said last week in her kitchen, speaking in Spanish as she prepared a dinner of baked tilapia fillets with nopal (cactus) salad. "I want to know my grandchildren."
Medina exemplifies the kind of transformation possible for people in heavily-affected groups, who are up against genetic and cultural forces that propel them toward diabetes. Yet she also shows what determined effort and investment it takes _ by both the individual person and the community around her _ to turn the tide.
Diabetes rates have been rising for decades in the U.S.
As with many chronic conditions, it strikes more ethnic minorities, more poor people, and more people who lack a high school diploma, compared to whites and those who are better off.
Although blacks are diagnosed at slightly higher rates than Latinos overall _ 12.6 percent versus 11.8 percent _ the rates vary when you look more closely at Latinos' country of origin.
Mexican Americans, who make up the majority of U.S. Latinos and the vast majority in
Doctors and public health experts blame both genes and the social environment for those extra-high numbers. The predisposition for diabetes runs in families, and Latinos seem to be vulnerable, said
Food factors in. The high-carbohydrate diet common in
"Sometimes in the change from
Add in some unhealthy aspects of American lifestyle _ the reliance on automobiles, the ready availability of cheap and fattening fast food, and the necessity in many families for both parents to work long hours _ and doctors say you've got a toxic combination for promoting obesity and disease.
In
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In Medina's household, the change in diet started as a tough sell. Her husband complained that she wasn't buying the foods he liked.
"It was really hard for us at the beginning, because the flavor was like nothing for us," said Medina's older daughter, Janet, who is 17 and attends
With coaching in her cooking classes, Medina learned to make her family's favorite dishes in a healthier way. Instead of bathing the tortillas in oil for her son Daniel's choice meal of chicken enchiladas, she softens them by toasting them in a dry skillet.
Janet loves chilaquiles, a traditional dish of crunchy tortilla strips simmered in salsa. Medina explained, "In
To make such turnarounds feasible for many more families, public health advocates say, it will take more than individual crusades like Medina's.
After all, Medina had some advantages _ free nutrition classes in her native language and a husband who earns enough as a landscaper that she can devote herself full-time to the home _ that other low-income and immigrant families may not.
"You're not going to solve this problem in the doctor's consulting room," said Vigran, the
To Rosales's eye, the name of the game is "education, education, education." People need information on healthy food _ not only what it is, but how to cook it and weave it into their diets _ from someone who speaks their native language and understands the culinary culture they come from.
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And for Medina, obstacles remain. She still drives most places. She still has to withstand her kids' clamoring for pizza and greasy buffets, and maintain a healthy menu on one salary for a family of five.
All three of her children are still "overweight," she said, because at school they can eat whatever they want.
At home that afternoon, Daniel, who is 12, wanted a snack before dinner. There were no tortilla chips or pastries in sight _ Medina had seen to that. Daniel reached into a basket on the kitchen table, heaped full of fresh produce, and chose a banana.
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(McClatchy correspondent Phillip Reese contributed to this report.)
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(c)2012 The Sacramento Bee (Sacramento, Calif.)
Visit The Sacramento Bee (Sacramento, Calif. ) at www.sacbee.com
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PHOTOS (from MCT Photo Service, 202-383-6099): DIABETES-MEXICAN
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