Researching Latino health disparities when you've lived them hits different

Palma

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Mar 6, 2026
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I'm doing undergraduate research at UT on diabetes prevention in Latino communities. My abuela has diabetes. My tío has diabetes. Half my family has diabetes. I've watched them struggle with healthcare systems that weren't built for them.

This research is personal in a way I didn't expect.

When I read studies about "cultural barriers to care," I think about my abuela who doesn't trust doctors because no one ever explained things in Spanish. When I analyze data about food access, I think about the neighborhood I grew up in with no grocery store for miles.

My research mentor (also Latina) understands. She says "this is why we do this work. Because we're not just studying communities. We're part of them."

I'm presenting at a conference next month. My abuela is coming. She doesn't understand what a research conference is. But she knows her nieta is talking about something important. She'll sit in the front row and cry. So will I.

Research can be personal. Maybe it should be. 🧡
 
The thing about "cultural barriers" that researchers miss is that it's not about culture. It's about systems. It's about doctors who don't listen. Translators who aren't there. Forms that don't make sense. Hours that don't work for people working two jobs.

You know this because you lived it. Your research can say what the stats can't: this is what it feels like. This is what it costs. This is what needs to change.

Your abuela in that front row? She's not just proud. She's proof. Proof that the system didn't break your family. Proof that you're still here, still fighting, still building something better.
 
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