| 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"
Latest Animal Insulin Articles
In response to the proposed removal of animal insulin from the market in the next few years, the Bellagio Group, an international professional group sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation in New York, gathered in Bellagio Italy on April 8 to discuss what actions should be taken. The result is this document which they have issued to the World Health Organization and other public health agencies worldwide. The report is a set of guidelines for the use and value of animal insulin.
Prof. Arthur Teuscher, MD (Switzerland), Dr. Pier Luigi Barbero, MD (Italy), Nina Bollhalder Sureskumaran (Switzerland), Jenny First, FBCO (UK), Dr. Matthew Klin, MB.BS/DRCOG (UK), Scott King, Editor-In-Chief (USA), Dr. Kristian Midthjell. MD (Norway), Dr. Deo Mtasiwa, MD/PhD (Tanzania), and Prof. Malina Petkova, MD (Bulgaria)
The welfare of people with diabetes depends on their active participation in their care. To achieve this, the patient must have information about benefits, risks and alternatives concerning his treatment. The patient must also have the appropriate facilities available to make a free choice regarding what type of insulin to use.
New research has made possible an overall understanding concerning differences in warning symptoms of hypoglycemia when using genetically produced human insulin and natural animal insulin.
The debate on these differences has continued since the introduction of treatment with human insulin and, unfortunately, very often the patients' experiences have been classed as "only anecdotal" and of little value.
Evidence supporting these experiences demonstrates neurophysiological differences during hypoglycemia in human and animal insulins.
Research has already demonstrated that human insulin has no clinical advantage for patients and that it has a faster absorption and consequently a shorter duration of action, so accounting for the greater fluctuations in blood-glucose levels. However, it has been the general view that because of its exact similarity to endogenous insulin, human insulin should be the insulin of choice for all.
With this in mind, we have put forth these five points:
I. that this latest information be relayed to those living with type I diabetes. This will enable those experiencing impaired or reduced warning symptoms of hypoglycemia or diminished feelings of well-being and safety, to re-examine their choice of human or animal insulin. This choice will then be based on both scientific evidence and the reported experiences of patients.
II. that this information be reported to government health departments, WHO, IDF, Diabetes Associations, physicians and all diabetes health care professionals worldwide.
III. that when insulin is needed, animal insulin should be considered as first choice treatment for all those where hypoglycemia may be of special concern. This may include the following:
IV. (i) that animal insulin remain available in all countries which presently have that facility.
(ii) that animal insulin is re-introduced into countries in which it is no longer available through the normal prescribing mechanism.
(iii) that animal insulin for insulin pens become available again to provide equal choice for patients and physicians.
V. that in future, greater recognition be given to the value of patient experiences in relation to adverse drug reactions.
Categories: Animal Insulin, Insulin, Pens
Jul 1, 1996 -
Email to a Friend
Send a link to this page to your friends and colleagues.