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Diabetes How to prevent diabetes and which therapy should i use to get rid of diabetes?
[ ] Want to answer more questions in the Health & Fitness category? Maybe give some free advice about: Illnesses?
There are lots of things you can do to try to prevent diabetes. However, if you do end up a diabetic, you need to realize that this is a chronic condition. That means that you can't get rid of it, you will always have it, but you can treat it. the only real exception to that rule is what they call "gestational diabetes" which is temporary and only occurs in pregnant women.
As far as ways to try to prevent it go, one big one is to keep your weight under control. Another is to try to eat a healthy diet and avoid excess sugar. You should be extra diligent about these things if you have a family history of the disease.
Basically, trying to live a healthy lifestyle is a good practice o try to avoid getting diabetes. Nothing is full proof but in doing so you drastically increase your chances of achieving this goal. ]
Seems a bit of a confused message here? If you've been diagnosed as diabetic you can't actually 'get rid of it'. It's a lifetime condition. It's controlled, never 'cured'. The way it is controlled depends on the type and severity. Your diet, oral medication (tablets) and injections of insulin are the three 'players'. Exercise/lifestyle also plays a part. None of the medication is available over the counter without prescription. You have to work with your doctor to determine the best way of controlling it for YOU. What you're 'preventing' is a tendency for the amount of sugar in your blood to get too high. But avoiding lowering it too much either. Finding YOUR way will involve a bit of initial 'trial and error' by you and your doctor (with close monitoring via blood tests etc) so it's way beyond the scope of a website Q&A/discussion to suggest methods. Once you have YOUR method determined it's up to you to implement it day to day. ]
There are no doctors here that can help you with this. Every persons diabetes reacts differently to medications. The only one who can hep you with this answer is your doctor. ]
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