PSA: Recently Diagnosed With Diabetes?
Oct. 20th, 2008 01:14 amDiabetes affects millions of Americans. If you have been recently diagnosed with this disease, then it's very important that you learn how to manage it before it starts to manage your life. You will have to make certain changes to your daily routine in-order to stay on top of your condition to ensure that you don't suffer from its adverse side effects. There are three main things you need to keep in mind: diet, exercise and blood sugar levels.
- Diet: There are many benefits to having a healthy and balanced diet. Not only will it help you control your weight and diabetes, but it will also help prevent a variety of other diseases. Limit the amount of un-healthy snacks and foods you consume, and save them for occasional treats.
- Exercise: Just like having a balanced diet, including exercise in your daily routine has many benefits. Exercising will help keep your weight down, keep your heart healthy and keep you from feeling some of the side-effects of diabetes
- Blood Sugar Levels: If your doctor has prescribed insulin injections to keep your blood sugar in the normal range, it is very important to keep checking your sugar levels. There are many testing monitors that are small and convenient to carry with you at all times.
By watching these three things, you can avoid some of the serious side effects of diabetes such as heart disease and kidney failure. Staying on top of the disease will help you continue to live life to its fullest. Even if you don't have diabetes or a genetic predisposition to it, a balanced diet and exercise routine will make sure that you don't develop it in the future. It's in your best interest, and that of your loved ones, to do as much as you can to prevent having to deal with its symptoms and side effects.
diabetic_bears is a community where gay men who identify as bears can discuss diabetes and diet. Partners and caregivers are also welcome. It's a place for diabetes recipes, to provide reports on new diabetes treatment breakthroughs, and to provide a place to vent, ask questions, and find links to helpful sites.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 06:39 am (UTC)Managing your diabetes will help you to avoid many of the complications, but you have to be "pro-active" in your approach.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 06:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 07:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 11:27 am (UTC)From the research I've been doing, it appears that the diabetes gene and the obsesity gene are adjacent, and that a single mutation can affect both.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 06:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 07:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 08:21 pm (UTC)Diabetes tends to be much more a result of aging in the elderly than any other causality.
A couple more links:
The Obesity and Diabetes Epidemic: The State of the Science and the Challenge to Public Health
The Twin Epidemics of Obesity and Diabetes
no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 09:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 09:47 pm (UTC)There may be a genetic predisposition to diabetes, just like alcoholism, but I think trying to pin all the blame on genetics is dodging responsibility.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 11:29 pm (UTC)Every time I turn around, I have another "nutritional expert" telling me that if I jump through this hoop or that hoop that all my problems will be solved.
(And, then when you do, and it doesn't work for you, the "experts" have no answers.)
Honestly? I don't care why I'm diabetic. It doesn't matter why. I still have to deal with it.
And, the whole weight thing? One group will tell you it's easy and fun to lose weight. Another will tell you it's next to impossible. (I tend to go with the latter. But, hey, it's my "religion". You can believe what you want to.)
no subject
Date: 2008-10-21 12:03 am (UTC)One doc told me I needed to exercise more. Would've been nice if he bothered asking what I was already doing. 1.5 hrs weight lifting x 3/week. 1.5 mile run 3x/wk. Finally I had one doc listen to me and test and damn whaddya think he found - low hormone levels.
As I've told others, I'm no big fan of the ADA's dietary guidelines. They're only good for giving me a higher glucose level than I have on my own. I also favor a lower A1c target than they do, but that's just me.