Intensive Diabetes Management
By (Author) Howard A. Wolpert
American Diabetes Association
American Diabetes Association
15th November 2016
Sixth Edition
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
616.462
Paperback
196
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
240g
Intensive diabetes management is the process by which blood glucose levels are closely controlled using multiple daily insulin injections or an insulin pump. People who use this method of diabetes management must be closely aligned with their health care team and highly motivated because it not only requires close scrutiny of blood glucose levels, but also constant monitoring of food intake and medication dosage, among other things.
Although difficult to maintain, intensive diabetes management has proven very effective and is now the rule, rather than the exception, in diabetes care. Virtually all patients with diabetestype 1 or type 2can improve their glycemic control and overall health through intensive diabetes management.
Intensive Diabetes Management is geared toward the health care practitioner who wants to implement this method in his or her patients. It emphasizes a team approach to patient care and offers guidance in helping patients move toward treatment goals appropriate for their individual skills and medical condition.
Individual sections address all of the key topics in intensive diabetes management, including rationale/physiological Basis, team approach, education, pyschosocial issues patient selection/goals of therapy, insulin regimens, insulin pump therapy, monitoring, and nutrition management.
This new edition is updated to cover the latest advances in medical research. New insights into diabetes and how they impact this particular treatment are covered. In addition, the data, guidelines, and procedures have been revised to reflect that newest positions of the American Diabetes Association's standards of care.
Howard A. Wolpert, MD is a Senior Physician at the Joslin Diabetes Center (Boston, MA) and the Director of the Joslin Institute Technology Translation, where he established the Insulin Pump and Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM) Program. He is also an Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and has residency at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. His special interests are insulin pumps, continuous glucose monitoring, digital health technology, and closed loop technologies.