Might not be everyone's cup of tea, but I'd feel wrong about not sharing the link.
The sheer number of 'firsts', 'mosts', and 'only's associated with our disease is amazing, and there's lots of names and anecdotes I'd never heard of before.
By now on page 43, and it's fascinating! How close a couple of people have come years before Banting! And fish insulin successfully used in Japan during WWII, I had no clue.
And I'll be forever in debt to all those killed dogs...
Might not be everyone's cup of tea, but I'd feel wrong about not sharing the link.
The sheer number of 'firsts', 'mosts', and 'only's associated with our disease is amazing, and there's lots of names and anecdotes I'd never heard of before.
Finished reading it yesterday. Really engaging and well-written.
The book also answered some questions I had regarding how they knew about the effects of carbohydrates in the diet before the advent of insulin and blood tests and how they treated (or tried to) people before modern technologies.
Also interesting is how doctors resisted the idea of giving freedoms and responsiblities to the patients for their own treatment.
I apreciated it a lot @Rusty_Sweetbread !
This was a great book with so many interesting things in it. I liked the comparison of diabetes to a tiger that you can never turn your back on. Thanks for sharing.