Abstract
To explore the political and economic dimensions of diabetes self-management for Mexican American adults. Critical ethnographic analysis of focus group data from caregivers and adults with diabetes. Three themes were identified: diabetes self-management is tied to other mental and bodily states, family and neighborhood environments cause stress and prevent diabetes solutions, and hassles of the health care environment subvert self-management. Cultural constructs about diabetes merge with social-political forces in explaining diabetes. Cultural competence in diabetes care requires attention to the political economy of the disease and advocacy for healthful political and economic change.
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