Personally I think that current diabetes patient education programmes are well hidden from those communities that need it most – usually the lower social classes! I mean how often have you seen a poster advertising such programmes or indeed has your practitioner offered for you to attend a session if you have been newly diagnosed?
Posts Tagged ‘Thing’
What is the best thing to do if I lost my insulin on a vacation?
I’m on vacation and my father forgot to pack his insulin. He has type 1 diabetes, needs two shots a day, and took a shot this morning before leaving. His doctor’s office is closed at this time of night, what would be the best solution to getting more insulin at this point?
Thanks in advance.
i have type two diebetes, is it comon get pissed off over the whole thing??
since i’ve been dignosed, i have been a real hot head… is it depression over the whole thing or what???
every thing in my life is one step forward two steps back!!
I found out that my cat has diabetes,gets 2 shots a day and special cat food,is their any thing else I can do?
My cat is about 10 years old, he has had this for 6 months now. I feel bad that he got this and don’t know why he got it so late in his life. I guss I just need some answers .
Please Help !
Is there such a thing as latent diabetes?
I have a strong family history of diabetes and as I grow older, I understand that there’s an increased risk of developing Adult Onset (Type II) diabetes. Is there a threshold that when blood sugar levels reach a certain point, one will develop diabetes? More pressing is the question: Can stress help to trigger or precipitate diabetes? I understand that elevated stress levels can trigger elevated adrenalin levels. Is there a cause and effect relationship between these two factors
What is the legal thing to do with leftover unused insulin needles?
My mother passed away a few years ago and had alot of extra boxes of insulin syringes,I kept them though because I too am a type 1 insulin dependant diabetic.So now I have hers and mine and I just recently got a minimed insulin pump and no longer need the syringes,so my question is what do I do with the needles that I have?
Do I just throw them in the garbage?Do I give them to my Dr.and let her give them to another diabetic that could use them? I just want to make sure that whatever I do is legal!!! Any help is greatly appreciated!!
Are Diabetes and hyperglycemia the same thing???
I Have hyperglycimia and I’ve seen websites that say they are but is it true???
Is there such a thing as a blood glucose AND insulin meter?
I am not diabetic, but I thought it would be interesting to track both my blood glucose and my blood insulin. Obviously a blood glucose meter is easy to buy, but can one buy a personal meter that measures both glucose and insulin? I can’t find one online.
If such a thing exists, brand names and websites would be very helpful. Thanks.
Did you know there was such thing as a sitting disease?
Your Body’s Biggest Enemy
Learn how to ward off the nasty effects of a new epidemic: Sitting Disease
You might not want to take the following stat sitting down: According to a poll of nearly 6,300 people by the Institute for Medicine and Public Health, it’s likely that you spend a stunning 56 hours a week planted like a geranium—staring at your computer screen, working the steering wheel, or collapsed in a heap in front of your high-def TV. And it turns out women may be more sedentary than men, since they tend to play fewer sports and hold less active jobs.
Even if you think you have an energetic lifestyle, sitting is how most of us spend a good part of our day. And it’s killing us—literally—by way of obesity, heart disease, and diabetes. All this downtime is so unhealthy that it’s given birth to a new area of medical study called inactivity physiology, which explores the effects of our increasingly butt-bound, tech-driven lives, as well as a deadly new epidemic researchers have dubbed “sitting disease.”
The Modern-Day Desk Sentence
“Our bodies have evolved over millions of years to do one thing: move,” says James Levine,M.D., Ph.D., of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and author of Move a Little, Lose a Lot. “As human beings, we evolved to stand upright. For thousands of generations, our environment demanded nearly constant physical activity.”
But thanks to technological advances, the Internet, and an increasingly longer work week, that environment has disappeared. “Electronic living has all but sapped every flicker of activity from our daily lives,” Levine says. You can shop, pay bills, make a living, and with Twitter and Facebook, even catch up with friends without so much as standing up. And the consequences of all that easy living are profound.
When you sit for an extended period of time, your body starts to shut down at the metabolic level, says Marc Hamilton, Ph.D., associate professor of biomedical sciences at the University of Missouri. When muscles—especially the big ones meant for movement, like those in your legs—are immobile, your circulation slows and you burn fewer calories. Key flab-burning enzymes responsible for breaking down triglycerides (a type of fat) simply start switching off. Sit for a full day and those fat burners plummet by 50 percent, Levine says.
That’s not all. The less you move, the less blood sugar your body uses; research shows that for every two hours spent on your backside per day, your chance of contracting diabetes goes up by 7 percent. Your risk for heart disease goes up, too, because enzymes that keep blood fats in check are inactive. You’re also more prone to depression: With less blood flow, fewer feel-good hormones are circulating to your brain.
Spending the day on your rear is also hell on your posture and spine health, says Douglas Lentz, a certified strength and conditioning specialist and the director of fitness and wellness for Summit Health in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania. “When you sit all day, your hip flexors and hamstrings shorten and tighten, while the muscles that support your spine become weak and stiff,” he says. It’s no wonder that the incidence of chronic lower-back pain among women has increased threefold since the early 1990s.
And even if you exercise, you’re not immune. Consider this: We’ve become so sedentary that 30 minutes a day at the gym may not do enough to counteract the detrimental effects of eight, nine, or 10 hours of sitting, says Genevieve Healy, Ph.D., a research fellow at the Cancer Prevention Research Centre of the University of Queensland in Australia. That’s one big reason so many women still struggle with weight, blood sugar, and cholesterol woes despite keeping consistent workout routines.
In a recent study, Healy and her colleagues found that regardless of how much moderate to vigorous exercise participants did, those who took more breaks from sitting throughout the day had slimmer waists, lower BMIs (body mass indexes), and healthier blood fat and blood sugar levels than those who sat the most. In an extensive study of 17,000 people, Canadian researchers drew an even more succinct conclusion: The longer you spend sitting each day, the more likely you are to die an early death—no matter how fit you are
Is a high Glycemic Index diet essentially the same thing as the diabetic exchange diet?
Been told to go on a strict GI diet, which is low on bad carbs. Is that the same as a diabetic diet?
Is this thing about diabetes drug true?I need expert’s advice..?
I recently read in Newspaper that taking diabetes drugs leads to 63% of death chances as they have the presence of “rosyglytezone”…I read that awareness regarding this was published in the well-known “New England Journal Of Medicine”…..
SO,all experts,i need your opinion regarding this..Is it true?….Or this is just a fight between rivals?…as,i found that the name of “Avondiya” is mentioned here which is supplied through “Glexo Smith Clean”…..Please..suggest me…is that true or not..
Thanks all…
Is diabetes mellitus type 2 the same thing as diabetes type 2?
help, please
. im a nursing student … a new one.. and trying to do some paperwork in someone who has diabetes type 2. i keep finding stuff that comes up diabetes mellitus type 2…is it the same thing as regular diabetes type 2???? i’m confused.