Resources Content Page
You will find all sorts of Diabetes Related Information & Links in our resource section. If you have a related website and wish to add your link, please feel free to do so.
You will find all sorts of Diabetes Related Information & Links in our resource section. If you have a related website and wish to add your link, please feel free to do so.
Executive Summary of website developed by the National Diabetes Education Project for Making Systems Changes for Better Diabetes Care.
If you want to live a life without limits, even with diabetes, you will need to know a lot about diabetes and a lot about yourself.
Explore articles to learn more about diabetes, discover ways to eat healthier, work more activity into your daily life and keep your blood sugar in check.
There are two types of diabetes: Type 1 diabetes and Type 2 diabetes. Type 1 diabetes includes individuals dependent upon insulin to prevent ketosis (abnormal accumulation of ketones in the body as a result of a de...
By: Djehuty Ma at-Ra
So you've decided it's time to take control of your diabetes and start managing your diabetes. This will involve making some changes to your lifestyle. Do you know where to start? Probably the best place to start is with y...
By: Lisa Lupichuk
Over the last few years my own diet has changed dramatically. As someone who is blessed with a naturally slim frame I have never had to diet to lose weight, but I maintain my current healthy weight with a great diet/eating...
By: Alissa Carter
People who develop diabetes as adults may experience a slowdown in mental abilities as early as their 50s, a new study of the increasingly prevalent disease found.
With a new study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention predicting that diabetic retinopathy will triple from 5.5 million in 2005 to 16 million in 2050, improved treatments are urgentl...
The brains of people with diabetes slow down early in the disease, according to a new study.
Adults with diabetes experience a slowdown in several types of mental processing, which appears early in the disease and persists into old age, according to new research.