Sunday, October 9, 2016
Friday, October 7, 2016
Sweets and Diabetes
Sweets don't cause diabetes and you can eat sugar when you are on diabetes, but they raise your blood sugar quickly and drop it quickly, so it is often avoided. Sugars are what cause your blood sugar to rise and fall. Thus, the diabetic has to avoid high sugar foods. If they do eat high sugar foods they have to monitor their blood sugar carefully to avoid a low and/or high.
<http://www.diabetes.org/food-and-fitness/food/what-can-i-eat/understanding-carbohydrates/glycemic-index-and-diabetes.html>
<http://www.diabetes.org/food-and-fitness/food/what-can-i-eat/understanding-carbohydrates/sugar-and-desserts.html>
Your bed's got two wrong sides. You life's all grouse.
I let your phone-call take its dismal course:
Ah can't stand it no more, this empty house!
Carrots choke us wi'out your mam's white sauce!
Them sweets you brought me, you can have 'em back.
Ah'm diabetic now. Got all the facts.
(The diabetes comes hard on the track
of two coronaries and cataracts.)
Ah've allus liked things sweet! But now ah push
food down mi throat! Ah'd sooner do wi'out.
And t'only reason now for beer 's to flush
(so t'dietician said) mi kidneys out.
When I come round, they'll be laid out, the sweets,
Lifesavers, my father's New World treats,
still in the big brown bag, and only bought
rushing through JFK as a last thought.
<http://www.diabetes.org/food-and-fitness/food/what-can-i-eat/understanding-carbohydrates/glycemic-index-and-diabetes.html>
<http://www.diabetes.org/food-and-fitness/food/what-can-i-eat/understanding-carbohydrates/sugar-and-desserts.html>
Long Distance I - Poem by Tony Harrison
Your bed's got two wrong sides. You life's all grouse.
I let your phone-call take its dismal course:
Ah can't stand it no more, this empty house!
Carrots choke us wi'out your mam's white sauce!
Them sweets you brought me, you can have 'em back.
Ah'm diabetic now. Got all the facts.
(The diabetes comes hard on the track
of two coronaries and cataracts.)
Ah've allus liked things sweet! But now ah push
food down mi throat! Ah'd sooner do wi'out.
And t'only reason now for beer 's to flush
(so t'dietician said) mi kidneys out.
When I come round, they'll be laid out, the sweets,
Lifesavers, my father's New World treats,
still in the big brown bag, and only bought
rushing through JFK as a last thought.
New Doctors and Diabetes
Specialty
| Rank | No. of doctors | % of Specialist Register |
---|---|---|---|
Anaesthetics | 1 | 11,587 | 11.5% |
General (internal) medicine | 2 | 10,774 | 10.7% |
Paediatrics | 3 | 6,277 | 6.2% |
General psychiatry | 4 | 5,918 | 5.9% |
Clinical radiology | 5 | 5,380 | 5.3% |
General surgery | 6 | 4,949 | 4.9% |
Obstetrics and gynaecology | 7 | 4,593 | 4.6% |
Trauma and orthopaedic surgery | 8 | 4,435 | 4.4% |
Ophthalmology | 9 | 2,712 | 2.7% |
Cardiology | 10 | 2,467 | 2.5% |
Histopathology | 11 | 2,189 | 2.2% |
Gastroenterology | 12 | 2,004 | 2.0% |
Respiratory medicine | 13 | 1,952 | 1.9% |
Haematology | 14 | 1,587 | 1.6% |
Child and adolescent psychiatry | 15 | 1,546 | 1.5% |
Emergency medicine | 16 | 1,530 | 1.5% |
Old age psychiatry | 17 | 1,527 | 1.5% |
Endocrinology and diabetes mellitus | 18 | 1,522 | 1.5% |
Urology | 19 | 1,480 | 1.5% |
Public health medicine | 20 | 1,468 | 1.5% |
Total | - | 75,897 |
75.4%
|
This table covers all new doctors in the US in the period from 2006 to 2015
<http://www.gmc-uk.org/doctors/register/search_stats.asp>
The Teacher
I was twenty-six the first time I held a human heart in my hand. It was sixty-four and heavier than I expected, its chambers slack; and I was stupidly surprised at how cold it was. It was the middle of the third week before I could look at her face, before I could spend more than an hour learning the secrets of cirrhosis, the dark truth of diabetes, the black lungs of the Marlboro woman, the exquisite painful shape of kidney stones, without eating an entire box of Altoids to smother the smell of formaldehyde. After seeing her face, I could not help but wonder if she had a favorite color; if she hated beets, or loved country music before her hearing faded, or learned to read before cataracts placed her in perpetual twilight. I wondered if her mother had once been happy when she’d come home from school or if she’d ever had a valentine from a secret admirer. In the weeks that followed, I would drive the highways, scanning billboards. I would see her face, her eyes squinting away the cigarette smoke, or she would turn up at the bus stop pushing a grocery cart of empty beer cans and soda bottles. I wondered if that was how she’d paid for all those smokes or if the scars of repeated infections in her womb spoke to a more universal currency. Did she die, I wondered, in a cardboard box under the Burnside Bridge, nursing a bottle of strawberry wine, telling herself she felt a little warmer now, or in the Good Faith Shelter, her few belongings safe under the sheet held to her faltering heart? Or in the emergency room, lying on a wheeled gurney, the pitiless lights above, the gauzy curtains around? Did she ever wonder what it all was for? I wish I could have told her in those days what I’ve now come to know: that it was for this--the baring of her body on the stainless steel table-- that I might come to know its secrets and, knowing them, might listen to the machine-shop hum of aortic stenosis in an old woman’s chest, smile a little to myself and, in gratitude to her who taught me, put away my stethoscope, turn to my patient and say Let’s talk about your heart.
Thursday, October 6, 2016
Aging and Diabetes
The percentage of American seniors who have diabetes is 25%, compared to Americans under age 20, which is 0.25%. One fourth of seniors in the US has this disease.
<http://www.diabetes.org/diabetes-basics/statistics/>
<http://www.diabetes.org/diabetes-basics/statistics/>
In View of the Fact
A. R. Ammons, 1926 - 2001
The people of my time are passing away: my wife is baking for a funeral, a 60-year-old who died suddenly, when the phone rings, and it’s Ruth we care so much about in intensive care: it was once weddings that came so thick and fast, and then, first babies, such a hullabaloo: now, it’s this that and the other and somebody else gone or on the brink: well, we never thought we would live forever (although we did) and now it looks like we won’t: some of us are losing a leg to diabetes, some don’t know what they went downstairs for, some know that a hired watchful person is around, some like to touch the cane tip into something steady, so nice: we have already lost so many, brushed the loss of ourselves: our address books for so long a slow scramble now are palimpsests, scribbles and scratches: our index cards for Christmases, birthdays, Halloweens drop clean away into sympathies: at the same time we are getting used to so many leaving, we are hanging on with a grip to the ones left: we are not giving up on the congestive heart failure or brain tumors, on the nice old men left in empty houses or on the widows who decide to travel a lot: we think the sun may shine someday when we’ll drink wine together and think of what used to be: until we die we will remember every single thing, recall every word, love every loss: then we will, as we must, leave it to others to love, love that can grow brighter and deeper till the very end, gaining strength and getting more precious all the way. . . .
Friday, September 30, 2016
Monday, July 25, 2016
The End of the 5 Years of Searching for a Cure Diabetes and to Many More
I may have decided to make Diabetes a lifelong project. During the five years that I committed to finding a cure for Diabetes, a lot of progress was made in advocacy, technology, research. But I personally know two people who have diabetes type I and I feel like that's two people too many. The costs associated with diabetes is astronomical. Maybe I feel like I should have done more, that I haven't done enough.
I haven't posted half of what I should on this blog, but I really don't know what I'd post that anyone else isn't already posting or working or has a slant on already.
I did find out one of my friends from church who I knew a long time spoke up in testimony about the disease which I didn't know that she had. It was a cold reminder that the disease needs to be cured. We let these things like life, get in the way of saving a millions of lives. Tragic, really. If all our thought power combined for one thing don't you think I would be cured in a year, if not one, two or three? And it can't be only the people who have the disease. Every one has hangups and gets used to a disease and thinks that the disease is personal and they know the disease better than anyone else. And they do, in their own bodies, for a fashion. But we need to look outside for the cure to this one. More objectivity is needed. Anyway. I love a good roast, and if it's a disease that is roasted, so much the better.
I haven't posted half of what I should on this blog, but I really don't know what I'd post that anyone else isn't already posting or working or has a slant on already.
I did find out one of my friends from church who I knew a long time spoke up in testimony about the disease which I didn't know that she had. It was a cold reminder that the disease needs to be cured. We let these things like life, get in the way of saving a millions of lives. Tragic, really. If all our thought power combined for one thing don't you think I would be cured in a year, if not one, two or three? And it can't be only the people who have the disease. Every one has hangups and gets used to a disease and thinks that the disease is personal and they know the disease better than anyone else. And they do, in their own bodies, for a fashion. But we need to look outside for the cure to this one. More objectivity is needed. Anyway. I love a good roast, and if it's a disease that is roasted, so much the better.
Call to Arms, if you will
About three years ago, I spent some time reading some online self help literature, as I was wont to do. And I read that you should make long term commitments and goals. A commitment of 5 years towards a goal is what you have to do to see what really matters, and to really motivate you. So right then and there, I made a goal...I would give five years, whatever I was willing to give to the cure for diabetes.
The past three years weren't really as productive as I had hoped. I came up with a lot of ideas to spread awareness of the disease, but still I feel like I haven't done enough. There are three large organizations devoted to this disease alone. The JRDF, DRI, and ADA, are the three main organizations that focus on Research, Community Awareness, Lobbying for diabetes. They have all done positive strides towards defeating this disease.
I've looked at Diabetes Type One in depth, and I find that it's an immune disease, not an endocrine disorder, so far as the research has come.
There's a lot of research on how to replace the immune damaged pancreas, but not a lot of studies on prevention. Right now they are struggling to find the genes which may predict diabetes.
There's barely any literature on Diabetes. There is vague references to it in movies, aside from Steel Magnolias, which offers a falsified version of the disease, pretending that diabetics can't or shouldn't get pregnant.
People who don't get the disease don't care about the disease, don't think it's a reality and aren't interested in talking about it. People who have the disease are ostracized by their blood pricking and needle rituals, and are ashamed to talk about the disease.
Diabetes isn't a new thing, either. People in middle ages noticed the "sweet water," urine, "siphoning" out of people and connected it with the imminent death. You can't say, "We've made progress, our patients are still alive!" Really, there's been a lot of research without a lot of progress. Lifestyle changes, yes, but in curing a disease that's literally been around since the Dark Ages, we fail grotesquely.
What is the individual to do?
There are ways that I could go.
I could write something, make videos, talk about diabetes statistics and why it should receive more attention than the other top ten killers.
I could do research myself. I'm always drawn to the movie, Lorenzo's Oil, where the parents find the cure for their sons rare disease, too late for their son, but helping countless other children. Pretty idealistic, but where many have failed, one may triumph.
I still feel that without the proper training, I have a much better chance at discovering the cure than educated people. Most cures were found by people messing around in a lab. But it is the much harder. I don't have my inspiration around anymore, my poor grandmother passing away several years ago. She had type one diabetes. And thus formed within me was the plan to rid people of this debilitating disease. It was a sky reach, but I believe her spirit is pressing me forward.
Not to mention that I need to make some capital on the side for clothes and fixing up the house, we have expensive repairs that need to be done. So all this would be in addition to working 30 hours a week.
It all comes down to what me as an individual can do. If I'm feeling low, I can write, if I'm feeling high, I can read articles. If' I'm mixed up, I can go to diabetes.com to soothe my soul that something's being done. I feel for researchers, there's got to be repetitive micro tasks that they need help doing or research they can outsource. But I know it's a dangerous business, cutthroat disease pirates, all hunting for that one thing, the grant. Maybe they need grant writers. Because the grant's not the aim, the research is.
This has been a long article, I'll leave it at that.
The past three years weren't really as productive as I had hoped. I came up with a lot of ideas to spread awareness of the disease, but still I feel like I haven't done enough. There are three large organizations devoted to this disease alone. The JRDF, DRI, and ADA, are the three main organizations that focus on Research, Community Awareness, Lobbying for diabetes. They have all done positive strides towards defeating this disease.
I've looked at Diabetes Type One in depth, and I find that it's an immune disease, not an endocrine disorder, so far as the research has come.
There's a lot of research on how to replace the immune damaged pancreas, but not a lot of studies on prevention. Right now they are struggling to find the genes which may predict diabetes.
There's barely any literature on Diabetes. There is vague references to it in movies, aside from Steel Magnolias, which offers a falsified version of the disease, pretending that diabetics can't or shouldn't get pregnant.
People who don't get the disease don't care about the disease, don't think it's a reality and aren't interested in talking about it. People who have the disease are ostracized by their blood pricking and needle rituals, and are ashamed to talk about the disease.
Diabetes isn't a new thing, either. People in middle ages noticed the "sweet water," urine, "siphoning" out of people and connected it with the imminent death. You can't say, "We've made progress, our patients are still alive!" Really, there's been a lot of research without a lot of progress. Lifestyle changes, yes, but in curing a disease that's literally been around since the Dark Ages, we fail grotesquely.
What is the individual to do?
There are ways that I could go.
I could write something, make videos, talk about diabetes statistics and why it should receive more attention than the other top ten killers.
I could do research myself. I'm always drawn to the movie, Lorenzo's Oil, where the parents find the cure for their sons rare disease, too late for their son, but helping countless other children. Pretty idealistic, but where many have failed, one may triumph.
I still feel that without the proper training, I have a much better chance at discovering the cure than educated people. Most cures were found by people messing around in a lab. But it is the much harder. I don't have my inspiration around anymore, my poor grandmother passing away several years ago. She had type one diabetes. And thus formed within me was the plan to rid people of this debilitating disease. It was a sky reach, but I believe her spirit is pressing me forward.
Not to mention that I need to make some capital on the side for clothes and fixing up the house, we have expensive repairs that need to be done. So all this would be in addition to working 30 hours a week.
It all comes down to what me as an individual can do. If I'm feeling low, I can write, if I'm feeling high, I can read articles. If' I'm mixed up, I can go to diabetes.com to soothe my soul that something's being done. I feel for researchers, there's got to be repetitive micro tasks that they need help doing or research they can outsource. But I know it's a dangerous business, cutthroat disease pirates, all hunting for that one thing, the grant. Maybe they need grant writers. Because the grant's not the aim, the research is.
This has been a long article, I'll leave it at that.
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