| My Account | Sitemap | Subscribe | Contact Us | Help |
Richard K. Bernstein, MD, discusses 19 proven ways to take care of your feet and avoid diabetes-related complications
Scott Brown writes about Denver Broncos quarterback Jay Cutler's life since his recent type 1 diagnosis
Justine Lorelle Blanchard looks at a chilling development among type 1 teens: skipping insulin shots and purging food as a way to achieve rapid weight loss
Beth Morrow follows up on an article we published in May about teens' problems — occasionally fatal — with insulin pumps
Diabetes Health Digital Advantage™, the free, online version of Diabetes Health magazine, virtually identical to the bi-monthly Diabetes Health print magazine, has many additional useful features.
While the pages turn in a similar fashion to a magazine's, direct hot links lead to research articles, products and advertiser sites.
Access to the amazing Diabetes Health Digital Advantage™ is through any web browser, so you can read the current issue of Diabetes Health magazine online wherever you are!
The must-have resource for physicians, educators and medical professionals who focus on the treatment of diabetes.
Finally! A fresh take on the “professional” journal. Each bi-monthly issue cuts through the jargon and presents the most important information you need to enhance your practice and assist your patients.
Each bi-monthly issue of Diabetes Health Professional is a self-contained handbook covering products, educational resources and the latest diabetes research, complimented by balanced editorial focused on medical news, drug prescription information, clinical practice recommendations and changing treatment options.
Each quarter we send you the latest, most updated research guides, product guides and educational resource guides available for you and your patients.
Related Complications & Care Threads on Diabetes Health Forums
A British study of 800 people 65 and older concludes that people with diabetes are more likely than non-diabetics to experience difficulties walking, dressing and climbing stairs.
1 comment - Feb 26, 2008 -
Depression, according to new research just published in The Lancet, is more damaging to your everyday wellbeing than chronic diabetes, angina, asthma, or arthritis. But the most disabling of all is the combination of depression and diabetes: If you have both, you are living at the equivalent of only sixty percent of full health.
3 comments - Oct 22, 2007 -
Cruising With Diabetes
Vacationing on a cruise ship is great fun, but it's a form of travel that people with diabetes often fail to consider. Although cruising with diabetes was problematic years ago, the cruise industry has finally realized that people with diabetes are a growing untapped source of potential customers.
0 comments - Aug 28, 2007 -
Mainstream Press Calls Type 2s Couch Potatoes After Study in Diabetes Care
A study published in the February issue of Diabetes Care revealed that only 39 percent of people with type 2 diabetes get regular exercise, compared to 58 percent of people without diabetes. Among people who were at risk for the disease, as the number of risk factors increased, the amount of exercise decreased.
0 comments - Feb 13, 2007 -
Vicki Abbott, a 65-year-old medical transcriptionist from Portland, Oregon, has taken the idea of tight diabetes control to heart. She adheres to a control regimen that is almost militaristic in its method, and her goal is perfect blood glucose.
4 comments - Sep 1, 2002 -
A little more than two months ago, I was diagnosed with carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS), a painful affliction of a nerve in the wrist-a problem that turns out to be 15 times more common in people with diabetes than in the general population. Last issue, I wrote about my early prognosis and the healing methods I had already tried. I asked people to call the DIABETES HEALTH office and tell me about their experiences with CTS. To my amazement, I received calls from dozens of readers. I found all of your stories helpful. Many of you asked me to report back about what I've learned.
0 comments - Jan 1, 1996 -
Not Yet Rated