Indigenous Cardiac Outreach Program (ICOP) is an intensive culturally sensitive initiative to bridge the gap with the capacity to address chronic diseases including diabetes. We report a snapshot study into diabetes profiles of our ICOP cohort after nearly ten years of service.
Diabetes control in rural and remote communities in Queensland: A snapshot look into Indigenous Cardiac Outreach program cohort
Summary
Aim
ICOP is an innovative multidisciplinary community-driven and culturally sensitive tertiary specialist program with the aim to ‘close the gap’ of cardiac care in remote and rural Indigenous communities
Benefits
We showed that in rheumatic heart disease, even though much work was done, there is still much to do to address the gap. Whereas, in lipid profiles, lipid profiles of the patients with established atherosclerotic disease in our cohort were comparable with the ones in developed countries (57 per cent achieved target LDL of less than 1.8 mmol/L). Diabetes control in our cohort was significantly better than previously demonstrated in rural and remote Indigenous communities.
Background
Diabetes mellitus is a major risk factor for cardiovascular diseases which disproportionately affects remote and rural communities especially Australian Indigenous communities.