Daily Care News for October 19, 2016
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- Pediatric Type 1 Diabetes: Reducing Admission Rates for Diabetes Ketoacidosis.
- A survey of youth with new onset type 1 diabetes: Opportunities to reduce diabetic ketoacidosis.
- Pathways to reduce diabetic ketoacidosis with new onset type 1 diabetes: Evidence from a regional pediatric diabetes center: Auckland, New Zealand, 2010 to 2014.
- A randomized crossover study of the efficacy and safety of switching from insulin glargine to insulin degludec in children with type 1 diabetes. Free full text available in PDF format.
- Estimating the impact of better management of glycaemic control in adults with Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes on the number of clinical complications and the associated financial benefit. Free full text available in HTML and PDF formats.
- Asthma related medication use and exacerbations in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes.
- Glycaemic control and risk of incident urinary incontinence in women with Type 1 diabetes: results from the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial and Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications (DCCT/EDIC) study.
- The Development of a Clinically Relevant Sleep Modification Protocol for Youth with Type 1 Diabetes.
- Young people with Type 1 diabetes of non-white ethnicity and lower socio-economic status have poorer glycaemic control in England and Wales.
- Prevalence of depression in Type 1 diabetes and the problem of over-diagnosis.
- Suicidal ideation reported by adults with Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes: results from Diabetes MILES-Australia.
- The efficacy and safety of DPP4 inhibitors in patients with type 1 diabetes: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Operationalizing and Examining Family Planning Vigilance in Adult Women With Type 1 Diabetes.
- Risk of macrosomia remains glucose-dependent in a cohort of women with pregestational type 1 diabetes and good glycemic control.
- Postpartum development of type 1 diabetes in Asian Indian women with gestational diabetes. Free full text available in HTML format.
- Treatable Diabetic Retinopathy Is Extremely Rare Among Pediatric T1D Exchange Clinic Registry Participants. See also Diabetic retinopathy screening for young people not needed, say US researchers.