printed from AmericanProfile.com on 11/23/2009

Responding to a Diabetes Diagnosis

You've just been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and your mind is swirling with questions.
You’ve just been diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and your mind is swirling with questions.

How do I check my blood sugar? Must I give up french fries? Will I have to give myself shots? Can I just take pills to lower my blood sugar? This isn’t the “bad kind” of diabetes, right?

Little wonder that you begin to feel panicky when your doctor uses the word diabetes and begins to explain about your body’s insulin resistance that causes sugar to accumulate in your blood instead of being used for energy.

Diabetes is a chronic disease with serious consequences that can include heart disease, blindness, kidney damage, nerve damage, sexual dysfunction, loss of limb, and even death—but it’s also a disorder that can be managed. Use your diagnosis as a call to action. You may be able to prevent or delay the most serious consequences.

“I always tell people: The good news is you’re in control. The bad news is you’re in control,” says Molly Brown, a certified diabetes educator for United Health Care in Plano, Texas.

So shore up your determination. Here’s what you can do:

“Patients involved in support groups do better in managing their diabetes,” says Tamara Johnson, a diabetes educator at Kettering Medical Center in Kettering, Ohio (pop. 57,501).

Amy Eskind is a writer in Nashivlle, Tenn.

Upload Your Own Stories, Photos and Videos

share icon
Every week, American Profile magazine brings you stories that celebrate the people and places that make America great. Now we want to hear your stories and see your photos, videos and even audio.

share your story Start Uploading Now!

Related Stories

If you enjoyed reading this story, Responding to a Diabetes Diagnosis, then you might enjoy these other stories.
 

Discuss this Article

There are no current discussions for this article. Why not be the first?

post your comment Post your comments on this article