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What You Need to Know to Lower Your Risk and Beat the Odds

Posted By: uhos_a
What You Need to Know to Lower Your Risk and Beat the Odds

Stephanie A. Eisenstat M.D., Ellen Barlow, "Every Woman's Guide to Diabetes: What You Need to Know to Lower Your Risk and Beat the Odds"
Harvard University Press | 2007 | ISBN: 0674003748 | 320 pages | PDF | 6.4 MB

Women have long needed a book devoted to their unique issues with diabetes. This up-to-date and practical guide advocates simple lifestyle changes that can help women reduce their risk of getting diabetes or, if already diagnosed, prevent the disease’s most serious complications. Every Woman’s Guide to Diabetes translates the latest findings from diabetes research into proven strategies busy women can use to stay healthy and gain control over an often overwhelming disease. The authors discuss the nature of diabetes, helping readers through the complex medical decisions involved in diabetes treatment. They highlight strategies to decrease the emotional stress and social isolation that often accompany diagnosis, and offer everyday techniques for managing blood sugar.
Key features include:
unique aspects of diabetes for women throughout the life cycle
timetable of recommended tests and check-ups
guide to medications with common dosages
charts to help organize diabetes-care tasks and supplies
time-management tips for better disease regulation
guide to contraceptives available to women with diabetes
review of issues critical to women before, during, and following pregnancy
advice for overcoming barriers to weight loss and exercise
plan for intelligent diet trade-offs while still enjoying meals
practical tips for planning exercise
strategies to avoid diabetes “burn-out”
Written by two physicians, one of whom is a woman living with diabetes, and an experienced medical writer, Every Woman’s Guide to Diabetes recognizes the power that women have in their households to effect lifestyle changes that will benefit themselves and loved ones, including their mothers, daughters, sisters, and partners. This power can reduce the toll of the diabetes epidemic.