{"id":15990,"date":"2016-02-29T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2016-02-29T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/condition-type-2-diabetes-how-you-can-control-type-2-diabetes-by-watching-your-blood-sugar\/"},"modified":"2016-02-29T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2016-02-29T00:00:00","slug":"condition-type-2-diabetes-how-you-can-control-type-2-diabetes-by-watching-your-blood-sugar","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/condition-type-2-diabetes-how-you-can-control-type-2-diabetes-by-watching-your-blood-sugar\/","title":{"rendered":"How You Can Control Type 2 Diabetes by Watching Your Blood Sugar"},"content":{"rendered":"
There's good news: Controlling diabetes—which means keeping your blood sugar at healthy levels and reducing your chances of diabetes complications ranging from heart disease to foot damage—is something that you can do.<\/p>\n But here's the bad news: Keeping your diabetes under control is up to you, and it's not always easy.<\/p>\n "If you have cancer, you go to your surgeon or you go to your doctor to get chemotherapy," says Yvonne Thigpen, RD, a certified diabetes educator and the diabetes program coordinator at Mount Clemens Regional Medical Center in Michigan. "But patients with diabetes can do a lot to control their diabetes by making healthy lifestyle choices in addition to working with their physician."<\/p>\n If a patient is a "take-charge person, they take it as good news, if they are not, they don't like that news," she says.<\/p>\n Many people don't control their blood sugar<\/b> More about type 2 diabetes<\/a><\/p>\n These people exceeded 6.5% on their hemoglobin A1C test, which is a common test that shows your average blood sugar level over the past two or three months. The American Diabetes Association and the National Institutes of Health recommends keeping yours under 7% to prevent complications, and the AACE recommends under 6.5%.<\/p>\n
A lot of people with diabetes, unfortunately, aren't in good control. A 2005 study from the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE) involving more than 157,000 people with diabetes found that more than two-thirds weren't adequately controlling their blood sugar, which put them at risk for blindness, kidney failure, foot amputation, and other complications.<\/p>\n\n