diabetestalk.net

Families Make Emotional Plea For Diabetes Research Funding

Families make emotional plea for diabetes research funding

Families make emotional plea for diabetes research funding


Families make emotional plea for diabetes research funding
Families and advocates delivered an emotional plea for more diabetes research funding before Congress on Wednesday.
People with type 1 diabetes, including over 160 children, were on hand for a hearing before the Senate Special Committee on Aging.
Those testifying urged lawmakers to extend the Special Diabetes Program, which funds research into type 1 diabetes. The program will run out of funds this September if lawmakers dont act.
The families were joined by actor Paul Sparks, who stars on the Netflix hit "House of Cards."
We are at the cusp of a whole new generation of therapies, devices, and hopefully a cure, Sparks, who was diagnosed with diabetes at the age of 28, told lawmakers.
Thats why we cant let up on research. We need to keep the momentum going by renewing the Special Diabetes Program before it expires at the end of September.
Sparks brought his own family to the hearing to highlight how the disease affects others.
He recalled one night when he turned off a glucose monitor so that his then-pregnant wife could sleep peacefully without any beeping noises. But he awoke to a severely low blood sugar level and a worried wife.
Sparks said that made him realize how important those technologies were and the need to keep research funding.
The Special Diabetes Program was created in 1997to promote efforts to cure and prevent diabetes, a disease that affect millions of Americans.
The program provides $150 million a year to advance type 1 research at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and treatment Continue reading

Rate this article
Total 1 ratings
children with DIABETES - Friends for Life UK 2017

children with DIABETES - Friends for Life UK 2017


Beaumont House Hotel and Conference Venue
Burfield Road, Windsor, SL4 2JJ, United Kingdom
FFL UK is for the entire family, including siblings
FFL leaves you completely re-energised, but in the most exhausting way imaginable! I couldn't have put an e-mail together that did it justice if I tried to straight away. I needed to rest my brain. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts for all that you and the staff do in putting together the FFL conferences. I cannot begin to imagine how much goes into it, but the result is just amazing. The magic of FFL never lessens in any way. It actually grows year on year.
My lasting memory that I will take away from FFL UK is the image of my son running around the hotel with his friends, bag on his shoulder (something he agreed to do after last years trip) happy and not feeling different. For him, this is very important. He once said to me 'having diabetes makes me different enough; I don't want to be any more different.' This makes me sad. I hope as he grows he will realise its not bad to be different, but for a time last week end he wasn't.
My child is different at FFL: more confident, more carefree, more positive, and doesn't feel different. I know these weekends will change her life in the long run, and the lives of all our children. I think all the positivity and caring soaks into their skin over those weekends as does the desire to have the best blood control they can, as they see everyone else doing what they have to do, without parents telling them.
Jo in Elementary said the loveliest words when I went to drop Daniel off on th Continue reading

Meta-analysis of RCTs suggests vitamin D supplementation improves markers of type II diabetes

Meta-analysis of RCTs suggests vitamin D supplementation improves markers of type II diabetes


Meta-analysis of RCTs suggests vitamin D supplementation improves markers of type II diabetes
Posted on: October 13, 2017 by Riley Peterson & John Cannell, MD.
A recent meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials discovered that vitamin D supplementation helped control glycemic response and improved insulin sensitivity in individuals with type II diabetes.
Type II diabetes has become an increasing health concern over recent years, as overweight and obesity rates have skyrocketed. Furthermore, approximately 57% of healthcare expenditures are due to diabetes and related events in North America each year.
Diabetes is considered to be a major risk factor for many adverse health conditions and diseases. According to the available research, type II diabetes contributes to:
70% of non-traumatic lower limb amputations
While poor diet, lack of exercise and genetics are the main risk factors for developing type II diabetes, evidence also suggests that vitamin D levels plays a role in the metabolic status of type II diabetes patients. Research indicates that vitamin D deficiency is associated with abnormal glucose metabolism, decreased insulin sensitivity and overall risk of developing type II diabetes. However, some of the available evidence on the effect of vitamin D supplementation on glycemic control in those with type II diabetes is conflicting. Therefore, researchers from this meta-analysis decided to explore this relationship.
A total of 23 RCTs and 1,477 individuals were included in this analysis. Studies were included if they were randomized controlled trials, an Continue reading

Type 1 Diabetes — The Unexpected Baby?

Type 1 Diabetes — The Unexpected Baby?

WRITTEN BY: Katie Doyle
“It needs your love and attention,” says Rebecca Foster, a mother to four children, and one who has Type 1 diabetes. “You have to care for it and you have to love it and embrace it, whether it’s acting up, or crying or whatever it’s doing.”
Rebecca wasn’t referring to one of her children – rather, she was describing a way to make sense of something that often doesn’t make a whole lot of sense: Type 1 diabetes.
“I kind of came up with this analogy in my head of how, you know, you bring a baby into a family, the mother has the baby, and the parents are responsible for the baby, but the baby affects the entire family.”
14-year-old Mia, the second oldest, was diagnosed with Type 1 in July 2016, just a month before she started high school.
“My daughter was diagnosed during a routine physical for high school through a urine test. In many ways, we were really lucky because she wasn’t sick; [she had some weight loss and was definitely moody} but nothing you wouldn’t have chalked up to a teenage girl about to start high school.”
The Fosters live near Los Angeles, where they enjoy skiing, cooking, and doing water sports together. The Type 1 community welcomed them right away, but they realized they needed something else to help introduce diabetes to their very active lifestyle.
After all, diabetes is something that affects the entire family, not just the family member living with it. Together with her kids and her husband, John, Rebecca felt it was important to recognize diabetes as “something we all need to think about.”
Effi Continue reading

Fact Sheet: Diabetes, Discrimination, and Public Places and Government Programs

Fact Sheet: Diabetes, Discrimination, and Public Places and Government Programs


Fact Sheet: Diabetes, Discrimination, and Public Places and Government Programs
People with diabetes often wonder whether they will be able to bring diabetes supplies into places like theaters, stadiums, and court houses, take their supplies through airport security , or fully participate in private and government programs, including camps and daycare . People with diabetes have the right to participate fully in our society without sacrificing their medical safety or facing discrimination because of misunderstandings, fears, and stereotypes about diabetes.
Federal laws prohibit most public places and programswhether operated by private companies, non-profit organizations, or the governmentfrom discriminating against people with diabetes. You should not be excluded because of your diabetes or be denied access to your diabetes supplies, and you should be provided with reasonable accommodations if necessary.
Here are some things you may be entitled to:
Permission to bring diabetes care supplies, including syringes, lancets, and insulin through security checkpoints, including at airports and courthouses
Breaks to check blood glucose levels, eat a snack, take medication, or use a restroom
Assistance with diabetes management for children in daycare, camps, and recreational programs
Contact us if you think you are being discriminated against in a place of public accommodation or in a government program, activity, or service.
People with diabetes often wonder whether they will be able to bring diabetes supplies into places like theaters, stadiums, and court houses, take t Continue reading

No more pages to load

Popular Articles

  • Diabetes drug could help those living with Parkinson's disease, research reveals

    A drug commonly used to treat diabetes could help those living with Parkinson’s disease, research has revealed. By 2020 it is predicted that 162,000 individuals in the UK will be living with the condition. While existing drugs help to control its symptoms, there are currently none available which slow or halt its progression. But now scientists say they have found that a drug commonly used to tr ...

  • Research suggests type 2 diabetes could be transmitted like mad cow disease

    2 pictures It is estimated that about 6 percent of the world's population suffers from type 2 diabetes. Labelled a global health epidemic by the World Health Organization, rates of the disease increased dramatically from about 30 million cases in 1985 to around 390 million by 2015. A new study has now found a previously undiscovered mechanism that raises the possibility of type 2 diabetes being tr ...

  • Giant Breakthrough in Type 1 Diabetes Research

    Diabetes Ireland is delighted to hear of the Harvard success and congratulate Professor Melton and colleagues on figuring out the complex series of steps necessary to turn stem cells into beta cells. Hopefully, they can negotiate the regulations for mass production so that an abundant supply of beta cells is available an new and innovative methods will be developed to cure/treat Type 1 diabetes. T ...

  • Research Roundup: Studying deadly cancers in dogs, low calorie diet and type 2 diabetes and more!

    Welcome to this week’s Research Roundup. These Friday posts aim to inform our readers about the many stories that relate to animal research each week. Do you have an animal research story we should include in next week’s Research Roundup? You can send it to us via our Facebook page or through the contact form on the website. “Researchers are turning to the family dog to find clues in hopes t ...

  • Research spotlight – putting Type 2 diabetes into remission

    Low-calorie weight management programmes Our scientists are busy researching a new weight management treatment, which includes a low-calorie diet, to help people put their Type 2 diabetes into remission. The study is called DiRECT, short for Diabetes Remission Clinical Trial, and it could completely change the way Type 2 diabetes is treated in the future. A year into the research and we've made a ...

  • New Diabetes Research from Gallup and Sharecare

    According to the Gallup-Sharecare Well-Being Index™, the national prevalence of diabetes climbed to a new high of 11.6% in 2016, up from 10.6% in 2008. If the diabetes rate had held steady at its 2008 level, 2.5 million fewer U.S. adults would have the disease today. Key findings in the new Gallup-Sharecare State of Well-Being: The Face of Diabetes in the United States report reveals that some g ...

  • New diabetes research takes a page from the past with a drug from the 1950s | Miami Herald

    Prior to Daniel Dyner having open-heart surgery four years ago, he appeared to be in great health. He had just moved to Key Biscayne from Venezuela, where he spent his time sailing around the world on solo trips to places like Trinidad, the Mediterranean and the coast of Africa. He swam nearly a mile every day and kept a strict diet. The 69-year-old Dyner was on the first lap of his daily swim in ...

  • Newly published research suggests that a 'fasting mimicking diet' may cure Type 1 diabetes

    Newly published research suggests that a 'fasting mimicking diet' may cure Type 1 diabetes Type 1 diabetes is characterized by the loss of insulin-producing cells in the pancreas and has largely been thought to be irreversibleuntil now. Newly published research suggests that there might be a cure for type 1 diabetes after all. Read on to get all the details. While type 2 diabetes is known to ...

  • Research Roundup: Lupus protein identified, vaccine for Type 1 diabetes, new chronic pain treatment, andmore!

    Research Roundup: Lupus protein identified, vaccine for Type 1 diabetes, new chronic pain treatment, andmore! Welcome to this weeks Research Roundup. These Friday posts aim to inform our readers about the many stories that relate to animal research each week. Do you have an animal research story we should include in next weeks Research Roundup? You can send it to us via our Facebook page or thr ...

Related Articles