The American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE) has released its new medical guidelines for diabetes. Needless to say, the 66-page guidelines are intended for your doc, not for you. Unless you are having trouble getting to sleep at night... But they're important for you to know about. Very. The guidelines are the first reference point for physicians determining the best course of care for diabetes patients. Blood sugar, blood pressure, type 1, type 2, pregnancy, metabolism, prevention etc etc. It's all in there.
So what's new? According to AACE president Dr. Richard Hellman, the focus is, for the first time, on patient safety - specifically, reducing the incidence of medical errors involving diabetes patients. "These guidelines are the first that specifically point to how best to protect the patient with diabetes against mistakes and misjudgments by all those who directly or indirectly impact their diabetes care, including themselves," said Dr. Hellman. "Patient safety is not a given."
The guidelines are being published as a supplement to the latest issue of Endocrine Practice (May/June 2007), the journal of the AACE. They can also be accessed online. Click here to view the pdf.


A white elephant is a supposedly valuable possession whose upkeep exceeds its usefulness, and it is therefore a liability. Every type 2 diabetic is a valuable possession to someone: a mother, a father, a sister, a brother, a daughter, a son...you get the picture. But when it comes to the complications of the disease - 








