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Are vitamins and supplements really necessary for people with diabetes? John White discusses the nature and eff ects of the most common ones people take in addition to their medications.
The verdict is in, says John White: Despite some intriguing initial results, subsequent studies have pretty much laid to rest cinnamon’s reputation as a pseudo-insulin.
There are so many non-sugar sweeteners out there – where to begin? Well, begin here as the famous medical duo of Drs. Michael and Mary Dan Eades explore the pros and cons of various artifi cial sweeteners.
Out of shape? Want to get better? Well, working your abdominals to get them into fi ghting trim is the classic way to start an exercise program. Ann Swank tells you how.
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Project HOPE, an international health education and humanitarian assistance organization, has launched The India Diabetes Educator Project. The four-year program will train 5,000 healthcare professionals to help counter the near epidemic level of type 2 diabetes in India.
With a population of 1.13 billion people, India has an estimated 40.9 million people with diabetes - the largest population of people with the disease of any nation.
As the country has entered an economic boom that has drawn millions of people to cities, traditional foods have given way to highly processed Western-style foods that can contribute to the development of type 2 diabetes. Project HOPE estimates that 12 percent of Indians living in urban areas have diabetes, compared with 7 percent in the United States and the United Kingdom.
Complicating matters is a research finding that many Indians have a gene that predisposes them to the development of diabetes.
The healthcare trainees will include nurses, dieticians and nutritionists who will fan out across the country bringing self-management skills to people who already have diabetes and teaching at-risk people how to avoid acquiring it.
Project HOPE's corporate partners, BD, Eli Lilly and Bayer Diabetes Care are sponsoring the program.
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