ComputerHunter.org

 

Some Changes Make A Big Difference!


When it comes to diabetes, small changes can make a big difference -- even in the middle of an epidemic that currently affects more than 2 million Americans and Canadians, and costs us an estimated $13.2 billion per year. Earlier prevention, earlier diagnosis, and very aggressive treatment of diabetes by controlling blood glucose levels, blood pressure, and lipid (i.e.cholesterol) levels have proven to prevent or significantly delay the damage that uncontrolled diabetes can cause to the body's blood vessels.

In terms of both the onset of diabetes and its complications,"The 2003 Guidelines have a much stronger focus on prevention throughout the lifespan of diabetes," notes Donna Lillie, Vice President, Research and Professional Education. "Diabetes does not wait. Individuals need to ask, "Am I at risk and what can I do?"

To help Canadians answer that question, the Canadian Diabetes Association's 2003 Guidelines have lowered the age considered at risk for diabetes by five years. That means an additional 2.5 million Canadians age 40 to 44 are now recommended for screening for high blood glucose (sugar).

The urgent need to identify people at risk is fuelled by expectations that the number of people diagnosed with diabetes will increase by up to 50% over the next 10 to 20 years.

Currently, about half of those diagnosed have already had diabetes for as long as 7 years, so the clock has already been ticking for some time. We want to avoid the common scenario where someone finds out that they have diabetes only when they're admitted to the hospital. We need to recognize that diabetes is a cardiovascular disease. This is another new focus of these guidelines.

In people with diabetes, we often see a clustering of cardiovascular risk factors such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and obesity. What we've learned in the last few years is that (compared to the general population) people with diabetes are at greater risk for all these complications. That's why having diabetes is about more than managing blood glucose.

Evidence over the last ten years clearly proves that like elevated cholesterol and blood pressure, high blood glucose is a continuous risk. That means the higher levels, the greater your risk of problems. The connection may be difficult to make, since all three conditions are often silent, so people don't necessarily feel their ill effects.

Author: Susan Rutter -- Publisher, Nutritionist, and Instructor who assists patients and the public make healthy choices and changes in their lives. Web Site: Healthy YOUbbies - http://www.geocities.com/healthyoubbies/







Google News - Top Stories

Boston Globe

GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks soar, bonds tumble on broad crisis plans
guardian.co.uk - 1 hour ago
By Kevin Plumberg HONG KONG, Oct 14 (Reuters) - Asian stocks surged, with Japan's Nikkei up more than 13 percent on Tuesday after governments around the world readied plans to take stakes in banks to keep the global financial system from collapsing.
Asian stocks soar after US rally; Nikkei up 13 pct International Herald Tribune
Asian stocks rise sharply Financial Times
Monsters and Critics.com - RTT News - Bloomberg - ABC Online
all 814 news articles


Washington Post

McCain and the Raging Right
Washington Post - 47 minutes ago
By EJ Dionne Jr. Are we witnessing the reemergence of the far right as a power in American politics? Has John McCain, inadvertently perhaps, become the midwife of a new movement built around fear, xenophobia, racism and anger?
Video: New McCain Stump Speech Emphasizes Economy AssociatedPress
McCain: I Choose To Fight Boston Herald
Salt Lake Tribune - The Week - The Weekly Standard - BBC News
all 2,799 news articles


CTV.ca

Wildfires threaten LA homes; two people dead
Reuters - 3 hours ago
By Steve Gorman and Alex Dobuzinskis LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Deadly wind-driven brush fires roared out of the foothills and canyons on the northern fringe of Los Angeles on Monday, destroying dozens of homes and threatening hundreds more dwellings.
Video: LA Fire Officials Try to Get Ahead of Blazes AssociatedPress
LA firefighters battle wildfires BBC News
New York Times - AFP - The Associated Press - KEYC
all 3,448 news articles


ABC News

House Race Is Shaken by Report of an Affair
New York Times - 1 hour ago
By IAN URBINA WASHINGTON - The Florida congressman who succeeded Mark Foley after he resigned because of a sex scandal is now embroiled in a sex scandal of his own, and has requested a Congressional ethics investigation to clear his name.
House to investigate lawmaker for alleged affair, ethics lapse CNN
A Florida (House) Bombshell Washington Post
The Associated Press - Palm Beach Post - ABC News - CBS News
all 318 news articles


Washington Post

Browns 35, Giants 14
New York Times - 42 minutes ago
By JOE LAPOINTE CLEVELAND - Eli Manning is well paid for doing many things well, but tackling is not among them. So when circumstances forced Manning to try to bring down Eric Wright after an interception, it was not a good sign for the defending Super ...
Browns take apart Giants, 35-14, on Monday Night Football New York Daily News
Final Score: Cleveland 35, NY Giants 14 Sports Network
The Plain Dealer - cleveland.com - The Associated Press - The Star-Ledger - NJ.com - SportingNews.com
all 727 news articles

Google
 

Copyright © 2006 Computer Hunter - A Division of Arthur´s Job Base