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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
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More data linking poverty and type 2 diabetes is out, this time from the national Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).
AHRQ reports that people who live in the nation's poorest communities, where the average income is less than $37,000, are eighty percent more likely to be hospitalized for treatment of diabetes or its complications than people who live in affluent areas where average income is over $61,000.
AHRQ found that in 2005, there were nearly 2,800 diabetes-related hospitalizations per 100,000 people in the poorest communities, compared with 1,561 hospitalizations per 100,000 people from more affluent communities.
Sources: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, September 2007; SeniorJournal.com
Editor's Note: This is so unfair! Our current system denies affordable healthcare to the poor, with the result that their diabetes remains untreated and they suffer unnecessarily.
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