Conducted educational programs on a broad range of topics,
including diabetes education and OR policies and procedures.
Not exact matches
Catherine's portfolio at AWHONN
includes work on
diabetes in pregnancy, perinatal nurse staffing, obstetric triage, vaccination issues, and consumer
education through AWHONN's Healthy Mom & Baby consumer media.
This difference was independent of other heart disease risk factors
including age, gender, family history,
education level, body mass index, smoking habits, hypertension,
diabetes and high cholesterol, all of which the researchers adjusted for in their analysis.
The known risk factors the researchers focused on
included depression, lower
education levels, physical inactivity, high blood pressure,
diabetes, obesity and smoking.
These
include a history of depression, alcohol,
education, diet, and a cluster called vascular risk factors because they affect the blood supply in the brain, such as stroke, heart disease, high blood pressure, high cholesterol,
diabetes and obesity.
The researchers controlled the data for a number of factors,
including age, duration of
diabetes, blood sugar control, race and
education, Whitmer said.
The U-M Pediatric
Diabetes education program
includes group classes for children, adolescents, and families.
The researchers also factored in other characteristics of the participants that have previously been correlated with dementia risk
including physical activity, age, sex, level of
education, obesity, low body mass index (BMI), and a history of high blood pressure, stroke, or
diabetes.
Covariates
included the child's sex, calendar conception year (categorical variable), gestational age, maternal prepregnancy body mass index (BMI, calculated as weight in kilograms divided by height in meters squared)(BMI < 18.5 = underweight; 18.5 ≤ BMI < 25 = normal weight; 25 ≤ BMI < 30 = overweight; BMI ≥ 30 = obese), maternal age at delivery (younger than 20, 20 to 24, 25 to 29, 30 to 34, and ≥ 35 years), maternal
education at delivery (≤ high school graduate, some college
education, college graduate, postgraduate, or unknown), maternal race / ethnicity (Asian, black, white, or other), and gestational
diabetes (yes / no).
«We have taken many steps over the past 15 years to ensure top quality care for patients with
diabetes,
including quality metric dashboards and panel managers for our primary care clinics, a comprehensive
diabetes education program and working with patient advocates.»
An RD / RDNâ $ ™ s
education involves extensive coursework in the science of nutrition,
including biology, chemistry, biochemistry, anatomy and physiology, food science, metabolism, courses in vitamins and minerals, nutrition through the life cycle, and medical nutrition therapy, which involves the nutrition - related prevention and treatment of everything from digestive disorders, to heart disease, cancer,
diabetes, and other health conditions.
27 hours of continuing
education including lectures on: Endoscopy, Feline Skin Disease, Canine Skin Disease, Feline Chronic Renal Failure, Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) Repair, Patellar Luxation Repair, Canine Heart Failure, Feline Hepatic Lipidosis,
Diabetes Management and Feline Internal Medicine.
We provide funds, time, and services to many community groups
including: Ronald McDonald House — Kapps for Kids, House, Southeastern
Diabetes Education Services, American Cancer Society — Relay for Life, YMCA — Jingle Bell 5K, United Cerebral Palsy, Ballet Pensacola, Bill Bond Baseball, N.B. Cook Elementary School, East Hill Christian School, Pensacola Catholic High School, Brown Barge Middle School, Workman Middle School, Scenic Heights Elementary School, B.T. Washington High School, West Florida High School, Aletheia Christian Academy, Episcopal Day School, Cokesbury Methodist Pre-K, Creative Learning Academy.
Still, many people who experience hypoglycemic episodes may do well to try further
diabetes education on how to safely adjust insulin and diet to activity, and to talk to their doctor about new regimens including insulin - pump therapy or continuous glucose monitoring, counsels Diabetes Forecast Editor - in - Chief Paris Roach, MD, of the Indiana University School of M
diabetes education on how to safely adjust insulin and diet to activity, and to talk to their doctor about new regimens
including insulin - pump therapy or continuous glucose monitoring, counsels
Diabetes Forecast Editor - in - Chief Paris Roach, MD, of the Indiana University School of M
Diabetes Forecast Editor - in - Chief Paris Roach, MD, of the Indiana University School of Medicine.
About National
Diabetes Month National
Diabetes Month is an initiative sponsored by the National
Diabetes Education Program, a federally funded program sponsored by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services» National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and
includes over 200 partners at the federal, state, and local levels.
Our specialty services
include inpatient and outpatient behavioral health, treatment and
education for
diabetes, innovative geriatrics care and comprehensive orthopedics.
Responsible for inpatient
diabetes education teaching,
including glucometer and insulin training.
Consultant: Certified
Diabetes Educator and Dietitian, Urban Inter-Tribal Center, Dallas, TX 7/14 - 5/15 Responsibilities include outpatient diabetes education and getting an ADA recognized Diabetes Self Management Program started, and nutritional cou
Diabetes Educator and Dietitian, Urban Inter-Tribal Center, Dallas, TX 7/14 - 5/15 Responsibilities
include outpatient
diabetes education and getting an ADA recognized Diabetes Self Management Program started, and nutritional cou
diabetes education and getting an ADA recognized
Diabetes Self Management Program started, and nutritional cou
Diabetes Self Management Program started, and nutritional counseling.
Australians who are more socially disadvantaged (by income, employment status,
education) and Indigenous Australians also have a higher risk of chronic disease,
including depression,
diabetes, heart disease and cancers (2, 3).
Mr Patrick Ah Kit, an Aboriginal Health Worker in public health areas, specifically in men's health
including education and health promotion about heart disease and
diabetes in men.
There are a number of factors which make managing A1C particularly difficult for teens
including: Social pressures and responsibilities, motivation, personality, nutrition, substance use, sleep habits, brain re-structuring, defence mechanisms (such as denial and avoidance), social justice issues (oppresion — racism),
diabetes education, individuation, future - oriented culture, access to health services, family structure and dynamic issues, marital conflict between parents, family and friendship conflict with teen, mental health stigma, academic pressure and responsibility, limited mindfulness and somatic awareness, spirituality (especially concerning death), an under - developed ability to conceptualize long - term cause and effect (this is developmentally normal for teens), co-parenting discrepencies, emotional inteligence, individuation, hormonal changes, the tendency for co-morbidity (people with
diabetes can be more prone to additional physical and mental health diagnosis), and many other life / environmental stressors (poverty, grief etc.).
The intervention
includes group sessions that simultaneously provide peer support, family systems therapy, and
diabetes education.