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Diabetes Discoveries & Practice Blog

Diabetes in America: A Go-To Resource on Diabetes and its Complications

This comprehensive, data-rich publication can serve as a resource to clinicians, researchers, and more.

Catherine Cowie, Ph.D., M.P.H., editor of the newly-released third edition of Diabetes in America, provides an overview of the resource, including sharing surprising facts about diabetes and describing how clinicians can use it to advise their patients.

Looking to learn more about “Diabetes in America?" Check out these posts and others to expand your knowledge and gain insight about diabetes care advances:

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Diabetes in America was written to serve as the go-to book for everything you ever wanted to know about diabetes but were afraid to ask.

It’s sort of the Wikipedia of diabetes. It is very, very comprehensive. It is data rich.

We wanted Diabetes in America to appeal to a broad range of people. They could be people with diabetes who want to know a little bit more about their condition. There could be, it could be people who are clinicians who want to advise their patients and confer with their patients about next steps and best treatment. It could be health policy planners in trying to plan best medical care, and also for researchers who really want to know the gaps in research.

There are some surprising facts that have come out in Diabetes in America. So, hearing loss is much higher in people with diabetes compared to those without. Periodontal disease, there's a chapter on oral health, there is much more gum disease in people with diabetes compared to those without, which is responsible for tooth loss. There is a higher rate of urinary incontinence, erectile dysfunction, of dementia, of depression.

We have separate chapters on the genetics of type one diabetes, the genetics of type two diabetes, because there's been such expansion in these areas over the last 20 years.

This is not just a chart book, it's not just tables and figures. There are pages and pages of explanation and observations that illustrate the points that are being shown in the figures and the tables. There are figures that can be downloaded for people to use in slides, researchers can use them.

Researchers should think of it as the basic place to go, the spring board, for further things they want to ask. So for this, they're going to get a comprehensive view of a particular topic in diabetes that they may be interested in. And from that, they will go to PubMed for example, and get more specific information, more detailed information, that is more focused.

So there have been many, many individuals who have contributed to Diabetes in America. This was really a 10-year effort. And I really want to thank every individual because it wouldn't be the product that it is were it not for all of the group effort.

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Diabetes Discoveries and Practice Blog
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