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Diabetes Care: a practical manual is a concise and easy-to-read reference source for all aspects of care in the management and understanding of diabetes.

This book provides a step-by-step guide to diabetes care for doctors, nurses and other health care professionals working in primary, community and secondary care; particularly general practitioners, practice nurses, diabetes specialist nurses, junior hospital doctors, and ward nurses, and pharmacists. The author draws on practical experience and takes a realistic, common-sense approach to the assessment, education, monitoring and treatment of diabetes in all age groups. New diagnostic criteria are explained, and the bewildering range of new pills, insulins and gadgets are clearly discussed with help in choosing the right one for your patient. There are detailed sections on helping patients to manage diabetes in every day life - eating, exercise, work and travel. There is extensive advice on the monitoring and adjustment of glucose levels, and how to prevent and cope with emergencies, whether in the GP's surgery or the intensive care unit. This book focuses particularly on the prevention, detection and treatment of diabetic tissue damage, including heart disease. Less well-recognised but important tissue damage and its management is also included. Specific chapters are devoted to children, the elderly and those from varied ethnic backgrounds, and men and women with diabetes.

Diabetes Care:a practical manual gently guides those who wish to establish new diabetic services, and provides more detailed specialist information for those who wish to enhance the diabetes care they already provide.

Diabetes Care: a practical manual is a concise and easy-to-read reference source for all aspects of care in the management and understanding of diabetes.

This book provides a step-by-step guide to diabetes care for doctors, nurses and other health care professionals working in primary, community and secondary care; particularly general practitioners, practice nurses, diabetes specialist nurses, junior hospital doctors, and ward nurses, and pharmacists. The author draws on practical experience and takes a realistic, common-sense approach to the assessment, education, monitoring and treatment of diabetes in all age groups. New diagnostic criteria are explained, and the bewildering range of new pills, insulins and gadgets are clearly discussed with help in choosing the right one for your patient. There are detailed sections on helping patients to manage diabetes in every day life - eating, exercise, work and travel. There is extensive advice on the monitoring and adjustment of glucose levels, and how to prevent and cope with emergencies, whether in the GP's surgery or the intensive care unit. This book focuses particularly on the prevention, detection and treatment of diabetic tissue damage, including heart disease. Less well-recognised but important tissue damage and its management is also included. Specific chapters are devoted to children, the elderly and those from varied ethnic backgrounds, and men and women with diabetes.

Diabetes Care:a practical manual gently guides those who wish to establish new diabetic services, and provides more detailed specialist information for those who wish to enhance the diabetes care they already provide.

Features

  • An easy-to-read common sense guide to diabetes diagnosis, care and management, covering both primary and secondary care
  • Provides rapid access to information about the full range of diabetes problems, including emergencies
  • Features tailored information on the treatment of diabetes in men, women, young people, the elderly and those from different ethnic groups
  • Up-to-date with the most recent studies into diabetes allowing evidence-based care
  • Reviews the latest treatment options, including oral hypoglycaemic drugs and their uses, and new insulins

Abbreviations
1Is it diabetes?
2Assessing a person with diabetes
3The aims of diabetes care
4Diabetes education
5Healthy eating and drinking
6Urine testing
7Blood glucose and ketone testing
8Non-insulin treatments
9Insulin treatments
10Low blood glucose - hypoglycaemia
11High blood glucose - hyperglycaemia
12Diabetic ketoacidosis and non-ketotic hyperosmolar hyperglycaemia (DKA and HONK)
13Exercise
14Diabetic tissue damage
15Diabetic foot problems
16Diabetes in young people
17Diabetes in women
18Diabetes in men
19Older people with diabetes
20Diabetes in different ethnic groups
21Work
22Travel
23Psychological and social aspects of diabetes
24Diabetes care in hospital
25District diabetes care
26Useful contacts
Doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals; particularly general practitioners, practice nurses, hospital doctors and nurses (e.g. on diabetes wards), diabetic specialist nurses, dieticians, chiropodists, pharmacists, medical students, patients and carers.
  • Diabetes Care: A Practical Guide



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