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Showdown
with Diabetes W.W.
Norton & Company, 1999 |
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This book is not for the weak or faint-hearted. But it is unexpectedly compelling. I devoured each page masochistically, hungry to know what could happen to me, 'a diabetic'. At the same time, my stomach was queasy and tears stung the backs of my (fortunately healthy) eyes, as I met a real person who had suffered the textbook complications of Diabetes: retinopathy, neuropathy and nephropathy. The second half of the book discusses Diabetes treatments, from the discovery of insulin to the emerging islet transplantation technology and notes a number of frightening statistics about the prevalence of complications in the diabetic community. Deb does not necessarily advocate transplantation as the only viable treatment for Diabetes. Rather, she seeks to make Diabetes sufferers aware of its possibility. She is critical of what she perceives as the medical profession's general failure to advise and discuss meaningfully with its diabetic patients the pros and cons of the treatment. If we are ignorant of the option, Deb argues, we haven't made a true choice about the management of our Diabetes. I was left with a philosophical and melancholy mood after reading this sobering book, however I would recommend it. It gives a human face to all that textbook knowledge. |
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