Keeping Your Eyes Healthy with Diabetes
Learn about the things you can do each day and during each year to stay healthy and prevent eye problems caused by diabetes.
Browsing the next page of People and Diabetes.
Learn about the things you can do each day and during each year to stay healthy and prevent eye problems caused by diabetes.
Type 2 diabetes is a serious health concern for Hispanic American women. 25 percent of Hispanic American women have been diagnosed with diabetes.
Diabetes mellitus is one of the most serious health challenges facing American Indians and Alaska Natives in the United States today. The disease is very common in many tribes, and morbidity and mortality from diabetes can be severe.
Diabetes in Hispanic Americans is a serious health challenge because of the increased prevalence of diabetes in this population, the greater number of risk factors for diabetes in Hispanics, the greater incidence of several diabetes complications, and the growing number of people of Hispanic ethnicity in the United States.
Diabetes mellitus poses a rapidly growing health challenge to Asian and Pacific Islander Americans in the United States.
How can you stick with your meal plan, yet join in the Indian food you have a craving for? Find out right here.
How can you stay healthy and still enjoy eating out – especially at a buffet? You can do it by planning ahead, choosing wisely and watching how much you eat.
How can you stay healthy and still enjoy going out for Chinese food? It’s easy – you just need to know what to look out for!
You can enjoy going out to eat Japanese food if you want. It’s easy if you’re armed with some simple information.
Year after year, do you make the same New Year’s resolutions to eat better or exercise more – yet don’t? If you think it’s all about self-discipline, that pattern will continue.
If good health seems to demand too many healthy habits, you’ll be cheered to know new studies show that just four can play a major role in preventing the top causes of adult death and illness in our country.
Some dieters may be working against themselves by setting unrealistic weight loss goals. Many give up in frustration and return to old habits – and their former weight.
High body levels of the hormone insulin, seen in what is called metabolic syndrome, or syndrome X, have gone from being an incidental finding among some overweight and inactive people to a major health concern that could mean a higher risk of diabetes, colon cancer, heart disease and stroke.
Diabetes 101: Tips to help you stay healthy while living with diabetes – including your eyes, heart, and your feet.