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Different Ways to Provide Better Health Care for Diabetic Patients
Health care providers play a crucial role in helping their patients prevent or delay type 2 diabetes and manage all types of diabetes. The following resources can support your efforts to screen, test, and refer people to type 2 diabetes prevention and diabetes management programs and services.
New Third Edition: The Mayo Clinic Diet
For endocrinologists seeking methods to help patients with diabetes to lose weight, many evaluate The Mayo Clinic Diet, which is based on the concept of energy density. Jason Ewoldt, M.S., RDN, LD, with Clinical Nutrition at Mayo Clinic's campus in Rochester, Minnesota, explains, "By consuming generous amounts of low energy dense fresh or frozen vegetables and fruits, people can achieve satiety at a lower calorie intake and better manage weight. Choosing more limited amounts of healthier choices in the other food groups can improve health in addition to help manage weight."
The Standards of Care in Diabetes for 2023
Dr. Robert Gabbay, Chief Scientific and Medical Officer, American Diabetes Association, discusses the standard care given to diabetics in 2023. Watch video to learn more.
Can Lab-Grown Beta Cells Revolutionize Diabetes Care?
Since the 1970s, clinicians have known that people with type 1 diabetes can be treated by transplanting pancreatic islets – clusters of insulin-producing “beta cells” – from a healthy organ donor. The procedure, however, is limited by a shortage of donors. The renowned diabetes researcher Douglas Melton, PhD, at Harvard University, leads a group that developed a way to increase islet supplies by generating pancreatic beta cells in the lab from stem cells. Today, researchers and scientists refine this process by coaxing stem cells to reliably develop into functional beta cells that can be transplanted into patients to produce insulin.
New Study Identifies Connection Between Diabetes Medications, Multiple Sclerosis
A new study found that anti-hyperglycemic medications used to treat Type 2 diabetes resulted in an increased risk of multiple sclerosis for people older than 45, particularly among women.