Taking control of diabetes is a team project. Here are some suggestions to help you support and help your family and friends with diabetes. (Diabetes Management, Diabetes Education)
Choose nutritious foods for yourself and your family every day by offering delicious dishes that are easy to prepare and promote a healthy heart. Enjoy Marinated Corn Salad, Tomatoes with Cucumbers and Yogurt, Grapefruit and Avocado Salad with Cilantro Cream and Brussels…
Make dessert fresh, fruity and healthy with Strawberry Cream Pie, Fruit Kabobs or Mango Yogurt Pops. (Diabetic Recipe, Diabetic Meal Planning)
Creating delicious healthy dinners can be a challenge. Take out the guess work and try Beef Roulades, Crispy Orange Roughy with Dilled Yogurt Sauce, Flank Steak with Corn Salsa or Pork Chops and Cabbage with Cider Gravy.(Diabetic Meal Planning, Diabetic Diet)
Reverse Metabolic Syndrome is a nutritional disease, the most straightforward way to prevent or reverse it is by improving your eating habits. (Reverse Metabolic Syndrome, Syndrome X, Insulin Resistance)
Antioxidants reduce your risk for heart disease and certain cancers and boost your immune system. (Macular Degeneration, Cardiovascular Disease, Free Radicals)
With people with diabetes, stress can alter blood glucose levels, the American Diabetes Association (ADA) notes. It does this in two ways. First, people under stress may not take good care of themselves. Second, stress hormones may also alter blood glucose levels…
Researchers are slowly zeroing in on the long-suspected link between stress and type-2 diabetes, which accounts for 90 percent of all diabetes cases. Anxiety is now believed to exacerbate diabetes by raising levels of the stress hormone cortisol, which regulates insulin and…
Researchers report that, BPH, or benign prostate hyperplasia, is a common condition in older men, but the risk of developing the condition seems to be increased by obesity and high blood sugar levels. (BPH, Benign Prostate Hyperplasia, Diabetic Complications)
Diabetes is actually the leading cause of end-stage kidney disease in the U.S., and 20 to 30 percent of people with type 1 or type 2 diabetes will develop the early signs of kidney disease. (Kidney Disease, Diabetic Complications)