Why do some people with type 2 diabetes who are using insulin have poor glycaemic control? A qualitative study. BMJ Open 2015;5(1):e006407.Tong WT, Vethakkan SR, Ng CJ. Why do some people with type 2 diabetes who are using insulin have poor glycaemic control? A qualitative study. BMJ...
Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, clinicians have noted that certain patients are at especially high risk of developing severe illness or dying from coronavirus infection. Type 2 diabetes—a condition affecting more than 10 percent of the U.S. population— is one of the main risk factors for ...
Recent research has helped us understand the physiology of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), including how remission is possible for many.1–4 This allows for a more positive perspective in the management of T2DM, which until recently was considered to be a progressive condition.5 But increased ...
On the surface, it seems to be a "win-win" situation, with everyone being happy, but let me ask you a question-how far do you think that publicity and marketing are winning here, and how much genuine recognition of achievement is taking place【1】Why are some successful people like ...
In 2000, for instance, type 2 diabetes was added as a disability because ofevidence linking exposure to Agent Orange with the onset of the disease. Heart disease has alsobeen added to the list.Another possible factor is that younger veterans seem less against welfare than their parents'...
How well older patients are treated is generally considered a good test of a hospital's capabilities. Such patients have a greater chance of being admitted with one or more conditions, such as diabetes or high blood pressure, that put them in a higher-risk category. We also incorporated s...
Due to the increasing insulin resistance of cells, patients with type 2 diabetes suffer from increased blood sugar levels with far-reaching consequences. After many years of illness, insulin production dries up and patients have to inject insulin.
While we sleep, our body manages ourmetabolic healthand insulin (the hormone that regulates sugar) production. Petkus explains that when insufficient sleep meddles with our blood sugar control system, the result may be an increased risk for type 2 diabetes. (21) (22) ...
Thus, it seemed that some products were being used in many different ways by different people, making interpretation of motivations more complicated. Virtually no one used products for asthma, allergies, diabetes mellitus, to improve sleep, or to aid in relaxation despite several products being ...
suggesting that physical activity provides important benefits directly to the individual child.” Specifically, they found that physical education is associated with academic benefits, better social and emotional well-being, and that it might even be protective against heart disease and type 2 diabetes....