MedCo strengthens hold on diabetes market

Filed under: Drugs, Products, Care Ever heard of MedCo Health Solutions? It's not a household name comparable the big pharmaceutical companies Novo, Glaxo etc. However, MedCo, which happens to be in the prescription cooperate control business, is a sizeable and powerful company. Instanter it's about to become yet larger: the partnership is poised to pay $1.5 billion for PolyMedica Corporation, the nation's biggest supplier of diabetes-related products. According to a Forbes report on the deal, PolyMedica has nearly one million patients using its products. Its product line includes Liberty Healthcare brand, blood glucose countdown kits and meters, lancet kits, insulin and the like.

No more peanut butter fixes for poisoning victim

Filed under: Products, Care Remember the crowded drink poisoning catastrophe involving Peter Pan peanut butter? That was back in February. Well, one of the victims was Atlanta regional Linda Moore (59), who has diabetes. Moore told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that she always kept a jar of Peter Pan on her bedside table in case she needed a quick blood sugar lift. She never dreamed it could make her so sick. What's terrible about Moore's article is that she ate the tainted peanut butter and became sick after the recall had been issued. Assorted weeks after, in fact. She says she was just so assiduous with her gig as a treat that she had not had hour to catch up on the news.

Patient safety the focus of new diabetes guidelines

Filed under: Type 1, Type 2, Support, Care The American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE) has released its new medical guidelines for diabetes. Needless to say, the 66-page guidelines are intended for your doc, not for you. Unless you are having bad news getting to sleep at night... But they're important for you to distinguish about. Very. The guidelines are the aboriginal reference speck for physicians determining the best method of care for diabetes patients. Blood sugar, blood pressure, type 1, type 2, pregnancy, metabolism, prevention etc etc. It's all in there. So what's new? According to AACE president Dr. Richard Hellman, the hub is, for the first time, on patient safety - specifically, reducing the incidence of medical errors involving diabetes patients.

Frustrated patients choose Urgent Care Lite

Filed under: Daily News, Services, Care I hardly any days ago I touched on the subject of NY-area drug store chain, Duane Reade. The firm established a free diabetes program a while back, offering advice, education and assist groups. Duane Reade says it's expanding the programme owing to of customer demand. Is this part of a larger trend? Looks compatible it. According to yesterday's New York Times, more and besides citizens are turning to drug stores for medical services. We're talking non-urgent things like sprains and toddler infections... and diabetes care. Some are frustrated by lack of access to their regular physician. Others are having budget issues going the traditional route.

CA school nurses balk at training non-medical staff

Filed under: Type 1, Type 2, Childhood, Daily News, Support, Care, Complications Recently I posted on the California Branch of Education's recent lawsuit settlement with the American Diabetes Association. CDE promised students would have access to legally-required diabetes disquiet on campus. With a scarcity of faculty nurses, CDE agreed caregivers could comprehend trained volunteers. I came gone from the treaty thinking, "Good! It may chalk up taken a lawsuit, but occupation solved." But this settlement is hardly a tidily wrapped package. Liability drives many decisions. Now the California Institution Nurses Construction has advised school nurses to seek guidance from resident lawyers before training volunteers.

Influenza vaccination recommended for people with diabetes

Filed under: Type 1, Type 2, Childhood, Person Onset, Drugs, Research, Care Aaaahh ... fall will soon deliver golden trees, crisp autumn air, piles of fallen leaves begging to be jumped in, and the stick of the flu vaccine. The State Foundation for Infectious Diseases (NFID) recently issued a announcement calling for worthier influenza vaccination rates among Americans with diabetes. Turns outside more than 50 percent of the 21 million general public with diabetes bring about not be given an annual influenza vaccination. This is opposite to the recommendations of the Centers for Disease Control and the American Diabetes Association. According to Dr.

Exercise of the Week: Step-Ups

Filed under: Type 1, Type 2, Exercise Just because the summer season has reached its end, it doesn't penurious that it's period to let our exercise programs go. People tend to settle on more weight during the colder months for a few reasons: 1) Because they probably won't be donning their bathing suits at the beach for all told some time, and 2) As our bodies are designed to slow our metabolism down -- a carry-over from our extra primitive days when bread sources became more rare during the cold season. For these reasons, and probably about eight thousand others, it's a smart essence to carry stoking the flames of your metabolism hold up over the upcoming frost.

When a child can't remember....

Filed under: Type 1, Childhood, Research, Opinion, Allie Beatty, Retro Review, Personalities In the fall of 1985, a ideal scary thing happened shortly after I was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes. One forenoon I woke up and I couldn't bethink matters I would normally remember. I couldn't cite the agname of my neighbor's dog. I had a fanatical attachment for Cookie. Of succession I would flash on Cookie! A diabetic minor would never forget such a delicious fame for such an adorable dog! One also configuration -- I had a pounding headache. My mom brought me to the hospital, where my endocrinologist met us. They ran catechism after evaluation and nary could an professional construe my consciousness loss.

Nutrigenetics the science of you and food

Filed under: Type 1, Type 2, Childhood, Mortal Onset, Diet, Research, Products, Allie Beatty Nutrigenetics is the announce of the interplay of genes and diet. The Diet Channel has published an article explaining what nutrigenetics is and how it will revolutionize the universe of diabetes. Researchers accept elevated blood sugar can be mapped back to a genetic reaction. Drugs are matchless overriding the consideration of elevated blood sugar and forcing the sugar into the cells, causing damage over time. Nutrigenetics is addressing the originate of the elevated blood sugar and may suggest a better diet to bridle your diabetes. Genes authority how you metabolize certain vitamins, minerals, and nutrients.

Nevada County has low rate of diabetes

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