Diabetic Diabetes Health

How to live with diabetes

Archive for January, 2010

Good diabetes glucose monitor?

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

I was wondering what a convenient monitor for type 2 would be that I could purchase at a pharmacy like CVS, or Walgreens? Thanks a lot.

List of symptoms of diabetes?

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

What are all of the symptoms of diabetes? Does anyone have a site that lists them?

which of these surprises you? and why?

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

I’m just curious.

Adults 18 and older need 30 minutes of physical activity on five or more days a week to be healthy; children and teens need 60 minutes of activity a day for their health.
Significant health benefits can be obtained by including a moderate amount of physical activity (e.g., 30 minutes of brisk walking or raking leaves, 15 minutes of running, 45 minutes of playing volleyball). Additional health benefits can be gained through greater amounts of physical activity.
Thirty to sixty minutes of activity broken into smaller segments of 10 or 15 minutes throughout the day has significant health benefits.
Heart disease is the leading cause of death among men and women in the United States. Physically inactive people are twice as likely to develop coronary heart disease as regularly active people.
37% of adults report they are not physically active. Only 3 in 10 adults get the recommended amount of physical activity.
Poor diet and inactivity can lead to overweight/obesity. Persons who are overweight or obese are at increased risk for high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease, stroke, gallbladder disease, osteoarthritis, sleep apnea, respiratory problems and some types of cancer.
41 million Americans are estimated to have pre-diabetes. Most people with pre-diabetes develop type 2 diabetes within 10 years, unless they make changes to their diet and physical activity that results in a loss of about 5-7 percent of their body weight.
Obesity continues to climb among American adults. Nearly 60 million Americans are obese. More than 108 million adults are either obese or overweight. That means roughly 3 out of 5 Americans carry an unhealthy amount of excess weight.
The percentage of adults in the United States who were overweight or obese (body mass index greater than or equal to 25) in 1999-2002 was 65 percent. Overweight and obesity cuts across all ages, racial and ethnic groups, and both genders. A new study in the Netherlands found that excess weight cuts years off your life.
16 percent of children and teens aged 6 to 19 were overweight in 1999-2002, triple the proportion in 1980. Fifteen-percent of children in the same age group are considered at-risk for overweight. The percentage of overweight African American, Hispanic, and Native American children is about 20%.
More than 10 percent of children between the ages of 2 and 5 are overweight, double the proportion since 1980.
Health risks associated with being overweight or obese include type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, asthma, arthritis.
The major barriers most people face when trying to increase physical activity are time, access to convenient facilities, and safe environments in which to be active.
School and worksite interventions have been shown to be successful in increasing physical activity levels.
Physical activity among children and adolescents is important because of the related health benefits (cardio-respiratory function, blood pressure control, weight management, cognitive and emotional benefits).
According to a study done by the National Association of Sports and Physical Education (NASPE), infants, toddlers, and pre-schoolers should engage in at least 60 minutes of physical activity daily and should not be sedentary for more than 60 minutes at a time except when sleeping.
One quarter of U.S. children spend 4 hours or more watching television daily.
Young people are at particular risk for becoming sedentary as they grow older. Encouraging moderate and vigorous physical activity among youth is important. Because children spend most of their time in school, the type and amount of physical activity encouraged in schools is important.
Only 25 percent of students in grades 9 through 12 engaged in moderate physical activity for at least 30 minutes on 5 or more of the previous 7 days in 2003.

How can my friend have gastro-bypass surgery for weight loss when she has blood poisoning?

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

my friend is one that has to get attention any way she can get it…she is obese and has wanted to get lapband or gastro bypass surgery for a while now…her insurance company has refused to pay for it on the grounds she has done nothing to try and lose the weight any other way and continues to gain weight at a bout 10-15 pounds a month…i live in another town a few hours away, but we stay in contact with face book as we do with a lot of our mutual friends…back in october she put on face book that she was in the hospital due to blood poisoning (something to do with her diabetes)…of course everyone on facebook would wish her well every day that she would post something about how terrible she was doing in the hospital…she ended up being in the hospital according to all of her posts for a month…2 weeks into her stay i was going to be headed back down to her area for business and i tried calling her cell phone and texting, but no reply…i sent her a facebook message telling her i would like to stop by the hospital to see her…she said that i couldn’t because she had caught the flu even though she was already being pumped full of antibiotics…ok, maybe next time i typed to her…she gets out of the hospital and a week and a half later she says in a facebook post that she is back in the hospital…i was a little worried, so i tried calling her parents after trying to call her and i just got their voice mail and no return call…i am not the only friend worried about what is going on…she was "in the hospital" for about a week and got out…now about a week later again she post on facebook that she will finaly be going into the hospital to get her by-pass surgery and she will be there through christmas…i am not trying to sound insensitive, but this is starting to sound like something is not right…could the insurance company decided all of a sudden to grant her this surgery?…if she has had this much health issues the past month with blood poisoning from diabetes complications would doctors do a surgery that is not a life or death matter even though her blood is "poisened"…i hate to say this, but with her dodging her friends wishes to see her at the hospital i almost think she may be making her health issues up?…am i wrong for thinking that?…i just don’t see how she would get surgery like this if she is in such poor health?…anyone else think something fishy is going on?…

How effective is running in preventing diabetes?

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

My mother is diabetic and I am a bit hypoglycemic. I am a bit worried about not being able to control sugars and would like to know from someone who might have a background in the medical field/nutrition and diet what effect running has. I’ve heard that exercising is "like taking insulin".

Can one have diabetes 2, but no weight loss?

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

I have all the other symptoms of diabetes, but do not loose weight. I have always had low blood sugar.
My skin is so dry though, that doctors comment that it is not normal. Can you comment?

  • Diabetes Posts

  • 10

  • Categories

  • RSS Diabetes Care News

  • Tags

  • © 2009. All Rights Reserved | http://diabeticdiabeteshealth.com