While there’s no cure for diabetes, doctors agree that certain lifestyle changes can help reverse symptoms and restore healthy blood sugar levels—sometimes in just months.
New research shows that eating potatoes in this form raises your risk of diabetes by 20 percent. Here's what you need to know. Not all potatoes are created equally, according to a new study that ...
The number of children who die before age 5 is expected to rise for the first time this century, amid sweeping cuts to global health funding by high-income countries, according to a new report from ...
The International Diabetes Federation (IDF) has announced the appointment of R.M. Anjana, managing director, Dr. Mohan’s Diabetes Specialities Centre and President of the Madras Diabetes Research ...
Experts say we’re in a golden age for treating chronic kidney disease, with new drugs like Ozempic yielding major results. Will dialysis and organ transplants become a thing of the past? A healthy ...
The Manhattan teacher hopes to inspire others with his journey and his struggle with Lyme disease and type 2 diabetes Pedro Soto N.Y.C. teacher Pedro Soto was feeling under the weather when he decided ...
The author, a scientist with type 1 diabetes, argues that dietary changes are an effective way to manage the disease. A low-carbohydrate, ketogenic diet helped the author normalize blood sugar levels ...
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