Posts Tagged ‘Living’

How to measure blood glucose – SingHealth Healthy Living Series

Sunday, May 22nd, 2011


Learn how to measure your blood sugar using a glucose meter with this step-by-step video. For more health information, visit www.healthxchange.com.sg

Diabetes, a New & Complete Guide to Healthier Living for Parents, Children & Young Adults with Insulin-Dependent Diabetes

Monday, October 25th, 2010

Diabetes, a New & Complete Guide to Healthier Living for Parents, Children & Young Adults with Insulin-Dependent Diabetes

Diabetes: A New and Complete Guide to Healthier Living for Parents, Children and Young Adults Who Have Insulin-Dependent Diabetes

Friday, September 24th, 2010

Diabetes: A New and Complete Guide to Healthier Living for Parents, Children and Young Adults Who Have Insulin-Dependent Diabetes

Living Safely with High Blood Sugar

Monday, September 6th, 2010

Product Description
Understanding Hyperglycemia can be one of the most important actions you can take to insure your good health. Understanding the condition and your diabetes diagnosis is critical to your health and well being.

Diabetes has reached alarming levels globally. Sadly, if left unchecked it can lead to serious medical problems or even death. You need to know how to see if your hyperglycemia is related to diabetes.

Also learn how lifestyle, nutrition and diet c… More >>

Living Safely with High Blood Sugar

Living with insulin-dependent diabetes: life can still be sweet.: An article from: Rehabilitation Counseling Bulletin

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

Product Description
This digital document is an article from Rehabilitation Counseling Bulletin, published by Pro-Ed on September 22, 2003. The length of the article is 5611 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Living with insulin… More >>

Living with insulin-dependent diabetes: life can still be sweet.: An article from: Rehabilitation Counseling Bulletin

Living with Non-insulin Dependent Diabetes

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

Living with Non-insulin Dependent Diabetes

Living with Diabetes

Monday, August 2nd, 2010


Diabetes type 1 is an autoimmune disease which affects the beta cells of the pancreas that produces insulin. This disease was formerly known as insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM).

Living A Lifestyle To Help Control Your Diabetes

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

A healthy lifestyle that includes weight control, proper nutrition and regular exercise goes a long way towards helping you control diabetes. Here are a few simple everyday steps you can take to keep diabetes at bay.


Lose that weight


Maintaining your ideal weight is vital in controlling diabetes. Studies show that when it comes to losing extra weight, every little bit counts and every kilo you lose could mean a significant improvement in health. Towards this end you should focus on making permanent and improved changes to your exercise and eating habits.


Make smart food choices


Choosing the right foods can help you control your weight as well as your blood sugar and cholesterol levels. Reduce your calorie intake and avoid fats, especially saturated fats. Increase your intake of foods that are high in fiber such as fresh fruits, seeds, vegetables, nuts, whole grains, and legumes. Fiber rich foods play a great role in reducing the risk of diabetes. These foods enhance blood sugar control and help you lose weight as well.


Controlling your intake of carbohydrates is essential is maintaining your blood sugar level. Eat complex carbohydrates including potatoes and whole wheat or multi grain breads, pasta and cereal, while avoiding foods that are full of empty calories and refined sugar such as cookies, cakes, pretzels and white bread. The amount of carbohydrates and fat each person requires depends on the individual’s activity level and calorific needs.


Get moving


Regular exercise is a panacea for all medical conditions. Exercise for at least 30 minutes everyday to get your heart pumping and to keep diabetes under control. Physical activity in any form helps you lose weight, enhances the efficiency of insulin and lowers your blood sugar level along with a long list of health benefits. If long boring work-outs are not your thing, engage yourself in some fun activity. Take the dog for a long walk or a run in the park. Go cycling with the kids or swim a few laps everyday. Play beach volleyball, go skiing.


Have a physical check-up and get your doctor’s advice before starting any exercise program. Take it slow and easy in the beginning and increase the intensity and duration gradually to prevent any injuries. Checking your blood sugar level prior to exercising and after you’ve finished will help you determine the reaction of different activities on our blood sugar levels and thus aid in avoiding the incidence of low blood sugar.

Learn about diabetes software for diabetes education at http://www.chirondata.com/

Cooking Sugar-Free and Living Healthy

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Many natural foods have some form of sugar in them, almost all plant-based foods have at least a little sugar, and fruits, of course, have quite a bit. While it may be virtually impossible completely eliminate sugar from your diet there are many ways to marginalize your sugar intake and significantly reduce the amount of sugar you use when cooking.

However, it is definitely possible, and tasty, to eliminate added sugar. This is very much a health advantage, because reducing your overall sugar intake is not only an excellent way of markedly reducing your risk of diabetes, stabilizing your blood sugar, and managing your weight. It is also a good way of reducing the amount of processed food you eat.

Many processed foods contain added sugar, simply because adding sugar makes food taste sweeter and more palatable. However, many so-called diet foods have added sugar to mask the fact that eliminating fat from food reduces its appeal. Many “diet” foods have reduced fat, but are high in sugar and that is definitely not healthy.

Health Benefits of Sugar-Free Cooking

Cooking sugar-free has a number of health benefits, all of which are excellent reasons to start cutting the added sugar out of your life. If you reduce your sugar consumption, and in particular cut out foods with added sugar, you can look forward to some of the following health improvements:

• Stabilization of blood sugar levels

When you routinely eat lots of added sugar (particularly as part of a low-fiber diet that includes lots of processed food), your blood sugar levels are constantly up and down, peaking right after you eat, and then quickly dipping to low levels as insulin floods your system to prompt your body to store the excess sugar. This is why you typically feel hungry soon after eating a high-sugar meal, insulin has cleared the sugar from your system, leaving your blood sugar levels very low.

The problem is, over time this constant peaking and dipping of blood sugar levels leads to insulin resistance and eventually, the development of diabetes. Eliminating excess sugar helps stabilize blood sugar levels, reduce insulin resistance, and prevent or delay the onset of this chronic disease.

• Weight management benefits

With excess sugar gone from your diet, improved blood sugar control can help stabilize your weight, too. Insulin helps your body store blood sugar as fat, and when you eat a high-sugar meal, the excess sugar is converted into fat quickly, due to the spike in insulin levels. In addition, those constant blood sugar highs and lows actually mean you end up eating more overall, because low blood sugar promotes binging. This means eliminating added sugar can actually help you reduce your weight (but remember that added sugar is not the only factor contributing to being overweight, so it is important to examine other factors of your diet too, such as lack of exercise, etc.).

• Nutrition benefits

If you eliminate from your diet the foods that contain added sugar, it is likely that you are eliminating processed foods that do not contain much in the way of essential nutrients. Replace those foods with high-fiber fruits and vegetables, and healthy complex carbohydrates, and you will find that you not only improve your health by eliminating sugar, but also because your diet now includes lots of tasty, nutritious natural foods.

• Oral health

Oral health is a benefit of a sugar-free diet that is often overlooked. A diet high in sugar promotes tooth decay by providing oral bacteria with plenty of the food they need to grow on teeth and gums. Tooth decay, gum disease, and cavities are problems that can arise very quickly on a sugar-rich diet, even with regular tooth-brushing. Eliminate the added sugar, keep up with a good oral care regime, and you will definitely benefit.

How to Cook Delicious Sugar-Free Food

Successfully cooking sugar-free, especially baking, simply was not possible two or three decades ago, but with the advent of products such as Splenda, it can be a breeze. The following are some quick tips for cooking with artificial sweeteners.

• Don’t fully replace sugar with artificial sweetener in recipes that use a large amount of sugar. In these recipes, using 100% artificial sweetener can be problematic, as the sugar is not only providing sweetness; it’s also helping improve the texture of the food. In recipes such as fudge and angel food cake, for example, replace no more than half the sugar with artificial sweetener.

• If you’re adding yeast, you need to add sugar. The yeast will not activate unless you add sugar, so yeast breads will not work unless you add some sugar. A good way of achieving this is to activate the yeast with sugar before adding it to the recipe. Up to half the remaining sugar in the recipe can be replaced with artificial sweetener.

• Using artificial sweetener can affect baking times, so check your baked goods at least fifteen minutes early, and check cookies about five minutes early.

Jennifer Bailey is a freelance writer who writes about fitness, health, dieting and products that can help you lose weight such as Splenda.