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Diabetes; Life After Diagnosis
So you've learned that you've got diabetes. Well after the initial shock you're stuck with dealing with the lifestyle changes that come with your diagnosis. When you go into the situation knowing that this isn't the end but only the beginning...

Diabetes – Living Beyond The Disease
Diabetes sneaks up on a person slowly – one grain of sugar at a time – one pound at a time -- until all of a sudden the pancreas and other systems of the body don't cooperate and function together. Insulin activity dwindles, fat and protein...

General facts about Type II diabetes
Over 18 million Americans are suffering of type I diabetes or type II diabetes. Other 4-5 million don't even know they have the disease. It's a concerning 6% of the U.S. population. Although it's not a fatal disease, diabetes is the sixth...

Type 2 Diabetes
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Type II Diabetes - Insulin-Dependent Diabetes
The term diabetes refers to higher than normal levels of sugar, or glucose, in the blood. Type II diabetes, also known as insulin-dependent diabetes, was commonly referred to as adult onset diabetes until recently when the name no longer accurately...

 
Diabetes ushers in new practice mode

Stephen Clement is the owner of Copper Bend Pharmacy. He is also a past Illinois state pharmacist of the year and the current National Community Pharmacists Association preceptor of the year. As a pharmacist, he is always happy to help the patient who calls his drugstore to verify insulin dose before giving himself the injection.

"I've made a difference in that patient's life," Clement said. "Do you really think that gentleman will go anywhere else to buy diabetic supplies? His trust is in me." Loyalty, trust and building relationships through individualized care are still a cornerstone practice for pharmacists. But other aspects of their careers are also developing. According to H. Joseph Byrd, associate dean for clinical affairs at the University of Mississippi's pharmacy school, the changing climate is good news for pharmacists.

"But getting pharmacists to transition from drug dispensing to patient intervention and disease prevention memos a shift in practice and may be a slow, gradual process. I'm advocating a new role for pharmacists that is more exciting, more challenging and eventually more economically rewarding," Byrd said.

The pharmacists need to make that transition. "There are so many companies offering so many different products, especially glucose monitors," said Gregory Whelan, an associate director with Pfizer who was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes at age 16. "You see all these boxes on the pharmacy shelves, and each claims to do something special. I rely on my pharmacist to be objective based on my facts and circumstances and to recommend the best device for me."

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