Diabetes Diet Tips


How To Succeed In Helping Your Diabetic Child Lead A Worry Free Life

Generally children and young adults are the victims of juvenile diabetes where their bodies are rendered incapable of producing insulin. This is also called Type1 diabetes. Insulin is a hormone that converts sugar into energy required for all activities of the body. Juvenile diabetes, though common among children and youngsters, can be stopped with a little care and supervision. A suspecting parent should monitor and teach children what to eat and how to properly care for themselves.

Symptoms

Poor eating and overweight contribute to Juvenile diabetes. A few symptoms can alert you and indicate the presence of juvenile diabetes. It is only the doctor who can diagnose juvenile diabetes and suggest treatment.

If your child is lethargic and has not energy to go through the day, has blue red vision, gets head aches or shakes he could have juvenile diabetes. It is diabetes you have to watch out for, though the symptoms are seen in your child and you suspect juvenile diabetes, consult the doctor immediately and treat the problem properly before it becomes more problematic.
The doctor will diagnose juvenile diabetes and explain to you how to treat and tackle it. Your child should also know what juvenile diabetes is and how it affects him. Thus they will be prepared if blood sugar levels shoot up or decline. Teach your child how to test his blood using a blood glucose meter. If the child is too young to test himself you should know how to test him and keep the levels under control.

Most children with juvenile diabetes lead healthy adult lives after learning how to care for themselves and keep their disease under control.

To prevent the child from getting juvenile diabetes, monitor what they eat, don’t’ allow them to eat a lot of sugar or empty calorie foods. Let them do a lot of exercise. These will help in the eradication of juvenile diabetes and open the gates for a healthy adulthood and a long disease free life.





Blogsphere: TechnoratiFeedsterBloglines
Bookmark: Del.icio.usSpurlFurlSimpyBlinkDigg
RSS feed for comments on this post
 |  TrackBack URI for this post