This book helps empower you to be an attentive caregiver for your friend or family member with diabetes—while also taking good care of yourself.
Provides caregivers with invaluable information on diabetes and its management and helps them to understand their role as part of the patient's support network.
A Manual for Healthcare Practice Trisha Dunning, Alan J. Sinclair. Inzucchi, S., Bergenstal, R., Buse, J. et al. (2012). Management of hyperglycaemia in type ... Unger, J. and Parkin, C. (2011). Hypoglycemia in insulin‐treated diabetes: ...
This manual is an essential guide to the care and management of people with diabetes mellitus, aimed at nurses and healthcare professionals, and written by an experienced clinical nurse specialist with extensive knowledge of evidence-based ...
Cochrane Database Syst Rev CD003260, 2003 Cox DJ, Kiernan BD, Schroeder DB, Cowley M: Psychosocial sequelae of visual loss in diabetes. Diabetes Educ 24:481–484, 1998 Coyne KS, Margolis MK, Kennedy-Martin T, Baker TM, Klein R, Paul MD, ...
This reassuring new book is a collection of articles from the award-winning Diabetes Forecast magazine. Each chapter offers practical suggestions for dealing with the emotional challenges of daily diabetes care.
An accessible guide to family health care discusses drug interactions, symptoms, first aid, and how to choose a family doctor, including a new research about hormone therapy and heart surgery.
This portable, practical guide to diabetes mellitus covers the entire spectrum of disease management wherever health care professionals encounter the disorder, including hospitals, clinics, and physicians' offices.
The underlying philosophy of this book is that there are opportunities for prevention, health maintenance and rehabilitation for older people with diabetes, which can realistically improve their quality of life.
For the close to 1.5 million people with type 1 diabetes in the United States alone and their family and friends, this book will help them understand the effects of type 1 diabetes, not just when diagnosed, but throughout their lifespan.