Tag Archives: How To Prevent Diabetes

Apps On “Prescription” From Your GP

General practitioners in the UK could soon be “prescribing” cheap or free smartphone apps to help their patients manage their health and medical conditions, according to news released on Wednesday by the Department of Health…
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Get Your Ultimate Body, Awesome Abs Now.

Men’s Fitness Cover Model Reveals How To Avoid Fitness Fads And Achieve That Head-turning Body And Six-pack Abs You Really Want. Everyone Is Capable Of These Goals If You Have The Right Information. It’s Time To Give Yourself No Option But Success! Get Your Ultimate Body, Awesome Abs Now.
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Dr. Breanne Everett Interview – Global TV Calgary

Heather Yourex, Global TV Calgary Heath Reporter, recently visited the Orpyx Medical Technologies Inc. head office to interview Founder & CEO, Dr. Breanne Everett. Dr. Everett explained how she hopes that their technology will dramatically reduce the number of foot complications associated with diabetic peripheral neuropathy. After 40, at least 30% of diabetics will have lost sensation in their feet. Orpyx’ devices, the SurroSense Rx and the SurroGait Rx, will serve as an early detection system to the patient, alerting them of any dangerous pressure areas or damage so they can immediately modify their behaviour and thus, prevent dreaded complications before they occur. For more information, please visit www.orpyx.com.

Source: YouTube

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Is it possible to have family member committed to nursing home against their will?

Hi, my wife and I care for a 42 year old son that has juvenile diabetes, bi-polar, and schizophrenia. He has had wounds on the heels of his feet that have not healed He almost lost his right leg a month ago due to an infection but the surgeon did surgery and removed the infection [...]
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Free-Access Online Journal Launched By American Heart Association

The American Heart Association has launched the online-only open-access Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (JAHA) – packed with free peer-reviewed research on heart disease and stroke…
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Endogenous Cushing’s Syndrome – FDA Approves Korlym (Mifepristone)

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved Korlym (mifepristone) to control hyperglycemia (high blood sugar levels) in adults with endogenous Cushing’s syndrome, who have type 2 diabetes or glucose intolerance, who remained unresponsive to previous surgery or are not eligible candidates for surgery. Pregnant women should never take Korlym (contraindicated)…
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Some Insulin Production Found In Long-Term Type 1 Diabetes

Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) research has found that insulin production may persist for decades after the onset of type 1 diabetes. Beta cell functioning also appears to be preserved in some patients years after apparent loss of pancreatic function. The study results appear in the March issue of Diabetes Care…
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Is high and low blood sugar common before diagnosis?

I’m 15 and have been having symptoms of diabetes for a couple of months. My blood sugar has come back elevated, but not high enough to be diagnosed yet. I’m testing my blood sugar daily and i’ve been in the 200s a couple times, but lately i’ve been having hypoglycemic moments and when i checked [...]
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Giving Up on Weight Loss

By Flashpoints

It has long been something approaching gospel within the diabetes community — for people who are obese and at risk for Type 2 diabetes, losing weight is the surest way to prevent or delay the onset of the condition. This advice is backed up by serious research; in one prominent study, overweight people with elevated blood glucose levels who aimed to lose 7% of their body weight through an organized program had a 58% lower risk of developing diabetes over the course of the study.

But studies showing the diabetes-prevention benefits of weight loss also tend to show something else: that very few people manage to sustain their weight loss once the organized program responsible for it has ended. This challenge is recognized by many experts, and some research has specifically examined how weight loss can best be sustained. But one prominent expert believes that in light of the data, health policy makers should give up on the idea of weight loss as a means of diabetes prevention.

In an article published last month in the journal Health Affairs, Richard Kahn, formerly the chief medical officer of the American Diabetes Association, claims that we don’t know enough right now about the biological processes underlying the body’s regulation of weight to develop effective weight-loss programs that can be applied on a large scale. In the meantime, he writes, public health officials and medical groups should concentrate on finding ways to help people control their diabetes once it develops. This, he believes, is a better use of valuable time and research dollars, since effectively controlling blood glucose levels has shown to be sustainable and leads to a greatly reduced risk of diabetes complications.

Not all medical experts and groups, however, are on the same page. As an article published at DiabetesInControl.com notes, several doctors associated with Boston’s Joslin Diabetes Center released a statement indicating strong disagreement with Kahn. Osama Hamdy, medical director of the center’s Obesity Clinical Program, asserted that Kahn was advocating “a surrender in the face of one of the greatest threats to public health the world faces.” Hamdy goes on to say that while maintaining weight loss is “a lifelong battle,” Joslin programs have shown that weight loss can be sustained for long periods of time. One program, he notes, led to a 50% reduction in diabetes medicines taken by participants and a 27% reduction in overall health-care costs.

What do you think — is getting large numbers of people to achieve sustained weight loss an impossible dream? Is it foolish to suppose that programs administered by a leading diabetes research center can be effectively duplicated across the country? Or is Kahn’s approach too pessimistic — or even, as one writer suggests, possibly distorted by ties to diabetes drug manufacturers? Leave a comment below!

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Copyright (C) 2012 R.A. Rapaport Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. See http://www.DiabetesSelfManagement.com/Terms/ for terms and conditions of reuse.

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Walking Over Shark-Infested Waters

By Jan Chait

There’s an old cartoon of a man walking a tightrope over shark-infested waters. On top of the water on one side is the word “hyperglycemia.” On the other side, “hypoglycemia.”

If that were me on the tightrope, I’d be leaning heavily toward the hyperglycemia side of the water and words beginning to form on the rope would read, “nothing works, so why bother?”

“Beginning to form” is one thing. “Have formed” is quite another and one I need to avoid. But how? And why is this happening? Again.

We all go through slumps relating to…well, everything. I’m sure we’ve all experienced that with our jobs. I’m pretty much on a permanent slump about housework; have been for years.

Diabetes is such an all-encompassing condition that needs constant vigilance. Monitor your glucose, know what you’re eating, get that exercise in, visit doctors, get your lab tests done…

Manage the unmanageable, sick or well, whether you feel like doing it or not. Not doing so can lead to a higher risk of acquiring things you REALLY don’t want to deal with. I have a spot of diabetic retinopathy in each eye: I don’t want that to get any worse. While my amputation was from a bone infection, I need to pay close attention to my other leg and foot so I don’t lose it because of diabetes. My microalbumin levels are at the high end of normal: Gotta do all I can to protect my kidneys.

While I’m generally in good control now, I have no idea how many years I’d had Type 2 diabetes when diagnosed in 1986. Then there were the nine years of denial after the diagnosis. Silently, diabetes was taking a toll on my body. Luckily, I inherited some good genes and I did, finally, start managing my diabetes and slowed down the process.

The weather could have something to do with my ennui. It’s cold and blustery. The trees are bare. The flowers are still sleeping. We haven’t even had much snow to cover the bareness of winter. Last February, I escaped to the Bahamas for a few days. This year, it’s another two months and two days (but who’s counting) until I can step onto that cruise ship and relax. (And I do relax the minute I get on the ship.)

Stress? Sure. Why not? Wanna hear about my weekend?

I got an e-mail from the online service I’d booked flights on. My airline had made a change and I needed to call as soon as possible to discuss options. OK. I declined the first suggestion because the flight left sooner than the one I booked and had two stops. Other suggestions were made and I picked one. The agent had to call the airline. The lines were busy and the wait was long, so she said she’d call me back.

However, she never called back. Finally, I got an e-mail from the online service saying they had accepted a flight change for me. Which turned out to be the itinerary I’d rejected earlier. Seems that its suggestions were only “suggestions.”

Did I protest? Oh, surely you know me better than to think I’d take that. So I called the online service. Oh, they could change it, but it would cost me more plus a penalty fee for making a change.

Excuse me? I didn’t cancel the original flight, I had specifically refused the one they gave me anyway, and should not have to pay a fee to change flights. I was put on hold for hours. (Yes, literally hours when added up!) I was disconnected (hung up on?) many times. Promises to call me back were unfulfilled.

Nothing I could do about it: The airline said so, the agent said. I had to take what was given to me.

Oh, yeah? I called the airline. Within half an hour I had the flight I wanted. No change fees. No additional charge for the flight I chose, which I’m sure was more expensive than the one I had originally booked.

If I ever book through an online service again, shoot me a reminder of this experience.

Back to my lousy blood glucose numbers, perhaps it would help if I dusted off and charged up my continuous glucose monitor. I haven’t been wearing it lately, but being fed a steady stream of numbers may be just what I need to get my act back in gear.

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Copyright (C) 2012 R.A. Rapaport Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. See http://www.DiabetesSelfManagement.com/Terms/ for terms and conditions of reuse.

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