The Charles H. Best Diabetes Centre promotes positive integration of
diabetes management into the daily life of children, adolescents and young adults and their families.
It may help to talk to other people who have diabetes, your diabetes care team, or a counselor so you can learn how to fit
diabetes management into your life.
Not exact matches
In many cases, lifestyle changes such as improved diet, stress reduction, increased physical activity, and weight
management will help you control your blood sugar and prevent prediabetes from turning
into diabetes.
Therefore, it passes through the digestive system, providing a feeling of fullness without adding any calories or being transformed
into glucose, which makes it ideal for both weight
management and
diabetes.
With proper
management, many cats will lose weight and put their
diabetes into «remission.»
To improve self -
management in
diabetes populations, we plan to test proven population - based methods that will take
into account these patients» needs to overly maintain self - reliance, such as the use of registries for population - based tracking to prevent patients from «falling through the cracks,» the use of telephone contacts or appointments, and the use of proactive contacts, surveillance, and reminders to keep disengaged patients involved in their own health care.
It is important to investigate factors that contribute to better
diabetes management during adolescence because patterns of mismanagement established in adolescence often extend into adulthood (Bryden et al., 2001), and the resulting poor glycemic control has serious and costly complications across the lifespan (Diabetes Control and Complications Trial [DCCT]
diabetes management during adolescence because patterns of mismanagement established in adolescence often extend
into adulthood (Bryden et al., 2001), and the resulting poor glycemic control has serious and costly complications across the lifespan (
Diabetes Control and Complications Trial [DCCT]
Diabetes Control and Complications Trial [DCCT], 1993).
During the transition
into adolescence, a developmental period marked by significant decline in
diabetes outcomes, the primary responsibility for
diabetes management shifts from parent to child (Wiebe et al., 2014).
Further research
into the source of conflict using measures with better psychometric properties and that are more specific to
diabetes - related conflict is needed to more precisely investigate if, and in what ways, pump use might address family relationships specific to issues of illness and its
management.