Summary: In adults with prediabetes residing in rural Bangladesh, predominantly from Muslim communities, a culturally adapted, mosque-based lifestyle intervention program focused on diabetes prevention delivered through religious community structures demonstrated significantly reduced incidence of type 2 diabetes over 12 months compared to usual care or no intervention received by control groups within the same communities, with no significant adverse effects reported, supporting the intervention’s safety and feasibility in low-resource Muslim-majority settings.
| PICO | Description |
|---|---|
| Population | Adults with prediabetes residing in rural Bangladesh, predominantly from Muslim communities. |
| Intervention | A culturally adapted, mosque-based lifestyle intervention program focused on diabetes prevention, delivered through religious community structures. |
| Comparison | Usual care or no intervention received by control groups within the same communities (cluster randomized design). |
| Outcome | Significantly reduced incidence of type 2 diabetes over 12 months compared to controls. No significant adverse effects reported. Supports safety and feasibility in low-resource Muslim-majority settings. |
Clinical Context
Bangladesh faces a diabetes epidemic with an estimated 13 million adults currently affected and 8 million more with prediabetes. The healthcare system struggles to deliver adequate prevention services, particularly in rural areas where most of the population resides. Community-based prevention approaches are essential for reaching this population at scale.
In Muslim-majority Bangladesh, mosques serve as natural community hubs. With regular attendance for daily and Friday prayers, mosques provide infrastructure, trusted leadership, and a captive audience that formal healthcare settings cannot match. Mosque-based programs can reach populations that may not engage with clinical services due to distance, cost, or distrust.
Culturally adapting evidence-based lifestyle interventions for local contexts is essential for effectiveness. This trial tested whether the proven benefits of lifestyle intervention for diabetes prevention could be achieved through faith-based delivery in rural Bangladesh.
Clinical Pearls
1. Diabetes Prevention Works in Low-Resource Settings: This trial demonstrates that lifestyle intervention for diabetes prevention is feasible and effective in rural Bangladesh, not just in well-resourced Western clinical settings.
2. Faith-Based Delivery Enhances Reach and Trust: Mosques provided built-in infrastructure, trusted leadership, and a regular gathering schedule. Religious framing may have enhanced motivation and community support for behavior change.
3. Cluster Randomization Prevents Contamination: By randomizing at the community level, the study avoided contamination that occurs when intervention and control participants interact.
4. Scalability Is the Key Promise: Bangladesh has over 300,000 mosques. Faith-based infrastructure represents an underutilized public health resource that could dramatically expand prevention reach.
Practical Application
Engage local imams and religious leaders early in program development. Their endorsement is essential for community acceptance. Frame health messages in ways that resonate with Islamic values: the body as an amanah (trust) from God, moderation in eating as a Prophetic tradition, and caring for health as a religious duty.
Adapt lifestyle recommendations to local food culture. In Bangladesh, this means addressing rice portions (the dietary staple) and promoting vegetable variety. Physical activity recommendations should account for cultural norms around exercise, particularly for women.
Broader Evidence Context
Faith-based health interventions have a substantial evidence base, particularly for cardiovascular risk reduction in African American churches. The Diabetes Prevention Program has been successfully translated across many cultural contexts, though few studies have tested mosque-based delivery.
Study Limitations
Specific diabetes incidence rates not reported in detail. Male predominance likely given mosque attendance patterns. Twelve-month follow-up may not capture long-term sustainability. Generalizability to urban populations or other Muslim-majority countries uncertain.
Bottom Line
A mosque-based, culturally adapted lifestyle intervention significantly reduces diabetes incidence among adults with prediabetes in rural Bangladesh, offering a scalable, community-accepted approach to diabetes prevention that could be replicated across Muslim-majority settings worldwide.
Source: Bhowmik B, et al. “Faith-Based Lifestyle Intervention for Diabetes Prevention Among Adults in Bangladesh: A Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial.” Read article.
