| My Account | Subscribe | Contact Us | Donate |
You can view the current or previous issues of Diabetes Health online, in their entirety, anytime you want.
Click Here To View
If you are a physician, educator and medical professional who focus on the treatment of diabetes, then this is the must have resource for you.
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.
Each week the Diabetes Health E-Newsletter delivers links to the very latest in news, reviews, blogs and videos from Diabetes Health direct to your inbox.
As a subscriber you'll get access to the amazing Diabetes Health Digital Advantage™ so you can read the current issue of Diabetes Health magazine online wherever you are!
You can cancel your newsletter subscription at anytime by clicking "Unsubscribe" on the bottom of any newsletter you receive
Then enter your new email address in the above form and click "Subscribe"
Related Monitoring Threads on Diabetes Health Forums
Tattoos aren't just an art form or a way of making a personal statement anymore: They are beginning to save lives.
4 comments - May 20, 2010 -
University of Florida engineers have designed and tested versions of a sensor for applications ranging from monitoring diabetics' glucose levels via their breath to detecting possible indicators of breast cancer in saliva. They say early results are promising - particularly considering that the sensor can be mass-produced inexpensively with technology already widely used for making chips in cell phones and other devices.
1 comment - Jan 26, 2010 -
"It feels like you accidentally pricked yourself with a pin, only it's not accidental and you have to do it over and over again in the same areas."
34 comments - Jan 18, 2008 -
Two new meters that purport to measure your blood glucose without a fingerstick are currently in the works–again. The road to a non-invasive meter is one that many have traveled before, but no one, thus far, has ever reached the market.
8 comments - May 30, 2007 -
GlucoLight's continuous, non-invasive device is a novel approach to glucose monitoring in the acute care environment. Using optical coherence tomography (OCT), the device is able to measure blood glucose levels through a unique anatomical area in the skin that shows physiological changes that directly correlate to changes in blood glucose. The GlucoLight monitor displays real time glucose measurements with an initial single point calibration.
0 comments - Apr 18, 2007 -
It has long been our dream to have some sort of device that would test blood glucose without breaking the skin to take a drop of blood.
1 comment - Jan 1, 2005 -
The race is on! Since 1986, the contestants—more than 100 start-up biotech companies—have been competing for the prize: a chunk of the billion-dollar market that awaits the manufacturer of a reliable, FDA-approved, noninvasive glucose monitor.
2 comments - Apr 1, 2004 -
As a diabetes researcher, exercise physiologist and individual with type 1 diabetes, I am always curious about how the latest diabetes technology fits into an exercise program. Exercise is, after all, one of the three cornerstones of diabetes management, along with diet and medication.
0 comments - Apr 1, 2003 -
If patience is a virtue, then millions of people with diabetes who have been anxiously awaiting the arrival of the GlucoWatch Biographer can now enjoy their just deserts.
1 comment - Jun 1, 2002 -
Not Yet Rated
Who says the people who invent computers, cell phones and other devices that make our life easier should have all the fun?
0 comments - Feb 1, 2002 -
Not Yet Rated