More than three hundred alphabetically-arranged entries offer information on the various types of diabetes, including coverage of current research and treatment options.
This work is a comprehensive reference source on diabetes, the complex metabolic disorder that afflicts nearly 20 million Americans. Beginning with a helpful 20-page historical overview, the book continues in an A-Z format and examines key aspects of the disease, including medical and physiological terms, treatment and self-care, related social issues, personal adjustment to having the disease, up-to-date research and statistics, and so on. All forms of diabetes are included: Type 1 (juvenile onset) and Type 2 (formerly "non-insulin dependent") as well as forms of the disease resulting from surgery, medication, malnutrition, pregnancy, and other causes.
The more than 300 entries cover such diabetes-related topics as diet, smoking, foot care, amputation, blood glucose monitoring, insulin use, legal issues, men's and women's issues, diabetes in various ethnic groups and nationalities, and more. Many helpful charts and sources of information are included in entries. Eleven appendixes cover organizations, periodicals, research centers, Web sites, medications, and so on. The bibliography is extensive.
The book strikes a good balance between the audiences of health-care professionals working with this population and patients themselves. Because diabetes is a growing problem, with more than 800,000 new cases diagnosed annually, this promises to be a valuable source for academic, professional, and public libraries. RBB
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