Many people with diabetes prefer an insulin pump to insulin injections. Here's how to know if it's right for you.
Most of the 38 million people living with diabetes in the U.S. use daily injections or insulin pumps to keep glucose at safe levels — but new research suggests that a third option could be just as ...
A little more than a century ago a diagnosis of type 1 diabetes was a death sentence. Today, thanks to extraordinary ...
The girl was diagnosed with stage 2 of the disease, a status that meant her own immune system was making at least two types ...
When Lindsay Tabacchini hangs upside-down off the sofa, her tummy pokes out and you can see the little black case that’s fastened around her waist. Slightly larger than a beeper, the device is an ...
The Omnipod 5 will be immediately available for people ages 6 to 70. A new technology for people with Type 1 diabetes, one that has been nearly a decade in the making, has been approved by the U.S.
ViCentra's Kaleido is "the smallest, thinnest, lightest, most precise insulin patch pump in its class," CEO Tom Arnold said ...
(Reuters Health) - As insulin pump use has increased, so has blood sugar control for kids and teens with type 1 diabetes, according to data from Europe and the U.S. But pumps were less common in ...
However, the fluctuations during ascent and descent aren’t expected to cause significant medical problems MONDAY, Sept. 9, 2024 (HealthDay News) -- Diabetics who fly with an insulin pump could find ...