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Interesting reading - gp handbook info re diabetes
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<blockquote data-quote="JohnEGreen" data-source="post: 1548471" data-attributes="member: 223921"><p>"</p><p>If you wait for your doctor to give you a diabetes diagnosis, the chances are good that by the time you are diagnosed you'll already have one or more serious diabetic complications. These include retinal damage, nerve damage, and early kidney damage. It is now known that these diabetic complications only develop after years of chronic exposure to high blood sugars. But, tragically, the way that today's doctors are forced to diagnose diabetes ensures that you will get no warning that you are experiencing those chronically high blood sugars until they have reached a level so high they have already done irreversible damage.</p><p></p><p>This is not an accident. Years ago a committee of medical experts whose task was to decide how diabetes should be diagnosed decided it was better to avoid diagnosing patients with diabetes than to give them early warning that they were suffering from elevated blood sugars. As a result, these medical experts intentionally set the standards for diagnosing diabetes artificially high, so that most patients do not get diagnosed until their blood sugar has reached a level where they may soon develop the diabetic eye disease that leads to blindness."</p><p></p><p>Quoted from here <a href="http://www.phlaunt.com/diabetes/14046782.php" target="_blank">http://www.phlaunt.com/diabetes/14046782.php</a></p><p></p><p>The above is mainly about the USA but what applies there generally often applies here.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JohnEGreen, post: 1548471, member: 223921"] " If you wait for your doctor to give you a diabetes diagnosis, the chances are good that by the time you are diagnosed you'll already have one or more serious diabetic complications. These include retinal damage, nerve damage, and early kidney damage. It is now known that these diabetic complications only develop after years of chronic exposure to high blood sugars. But, tragically, the way that today's doctors are forced to diagnose diabetes ensures that you will get no warning that you are experiencing those chronically high blood sugars until they have reached a level so high they have already done irreversible damage. This is not an accident. Years ago a committee of medical experts whose task was to decide how diabetes should be diagnosed decided it was better to avoid diagnosing patients with diabetes than to give them early warning that they were suffering from elevated blood sugars. As a result, these medical experts intentionally set the standards for diagnosing diabetes artificially high, so that most patients do not get diagnosed until their blood sugar has reached a level where they may soon develop the diabetic eye disease that leads to blindness." Quoted from here [URL]http://www.phlaunt.com/diabetes/14046782.php[/URL] The above is mainly about the USA but what applies there generally often applies here. [/QUOTE]
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