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#National diabetes day
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*bangs pots and pans together*
WAKE UP BITCHES
IT’S NATIONAL DIABETES DAY!!
You know what that means? DIABETES POSTS ALL DAY
Oh, and please wear blue for support!
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nothoward · 11 months
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Happy World Diabetes Day!!!
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reserwrekt · 2 years
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Trying not to be salty about being an indigenous person that's currently struggling very hard to afford food during a time when many white people will be stuffing themselves full. If you can help us not go to bed hungry another night- v:@ kittyzibby
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murderousink23 · 11 months
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11/14/2023 is National Children's Day 🧒🇮🇳, Dobruja Day 🇷🇴, National Pickle Day 🥒🇺🇲, National Spicy Guacamole Day 🇺🇲, World Diabetes Day 🇺🇳
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World Diabetes Day
The only thing more depressing than falling victim to diabetes is the knowledge that it can be avoided. And that’s one of the main reasons we have a day dedicated to diabetes. A wake-up call is urgently needed, and occasions like World Diabetes Day provide a rallying point.
Read more: https://www.freedomfromdiabetes.org/blog/post/world-diabetes-day-2021/2576
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subby-sab · 11 months
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Today is 14th of November.
Today is National Pickle Day, Children's Day, World Diabetes Day.
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batboyblog · 1 month
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Things the Biden-Harris Administration Did This Week #31
August 9-16 2024
President Biden and Vice-President Harris announced together the successful conclusion of the first negotiations between Medicare and pharmaceutical companies over drug prices. For years Medicare was not allow to directly negotiate princes with drug companies leaving seniors to pay high prices. It has been a Democratic goal for many years to change this. President Biden noted he first introduced a bill to allow these negotiations as a Senator back in 1973. Thanks to Inflation Reduction Act, passed with no Republican support using Vice-President Harris' tie breaking vote, this long time Democratic goal is now a reality. Savings on these first ten drugs are between 38% and 79% and will collectively save seniors $1.8 billion dollars in out of pocket costs. This comes on top of the Biden-Harris Administration already having capped the price of insulin for Medicare's 3.5 million diabetics at $35 a month, as well as the Administration's plan to cap Medicare out of pocket drug costs at $2,000 a year starting January 2025.
President Biden and Vice President Harris have launched a wide ranging all of government effort to crack down on companies wasting customers time with excessive paperwork, hold times, and robots rather than real people. Some of the actions from the "Time is Money" effort include: The FTC and FCC putting forward rules that require companies to make canceling a subscription or service as easy as signing up for it. The Department of Transportation has required automatic refunds for canceled flights. The CFPB is working on rules to require companies to have to allow customers to speak to a real person with just one button click ending endless "doom loops" of recored messages. The CFPB is also working on rules around chatbots, particularly their use from banks. The FTC is working on rules to ban companies from posting fake reviews, suppressing honest negative reviews, or paying for  positive reviews. HHS and the Department of Labor are taking steps to require insurance companies to allow health claims to be submitted online. All these actions come on top of the Biden Administration's efforts to get rid of junk fees.
President Biden and First Lady Jill Biden announced further funding as part of the President's Cancer Moonshot. The Cancer Moonshot was launched by then Vice-President Biden in 2016 in the aftermath of his son Beau Biden's death from brain cancer in late 2015. It was scrapped by Trump as political retaliation against the Obama-Biden Administration. Revived by President Biden in 2022 it has the goal of cutting the number of cancer deaths in half over the next 25 years, saving 4 million lives. Part of the Moonshot is Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H), grants to help develop cutting edge technology to prevent, detect, and treat cancer. The President and First Lady announced $150 million in ARPA-H grants this week focused on more successful cancer surgeries. With grants to Tulane, Rice, Johns Hopkins, and Dartmouth, among others, they'll help fund imaging and microscope technology that will allow surgeons to more successfully determine if all cancer has been remove, as well as medical imaging focused on preventing damage to healthy tissues during surgeries.
Vice-President Harris announced a 4-year plan to lower housing costs. The Vice-President plans on offering $25,000 to first time home buyers in down-payment support. It's believed this will help support 1 million first time buyers a year. She also called for the building of 3 million more housing units, and a $40 billion innovation fund to spur innovative housing construction. This adds to President Biden's call for a $10,000 tax credit for first time buyers and calls by the President to punish landlords who raise the rent by over 5%.
President Biden Designates the site of the 1908 Springfield Race Riot a National Monument. The two day riot in Illinois capital took place just blocks away from Abraham Lincoln's Springfield home. In August 1908, 17 people die, including a black infant, and 2,000 black refugees were forced to flee the city. As a direct result of the riot, black community leaders and white allies met a few months later in New York and founded the NAACP. The new National Monument will seek to preserve the history and educate the public both on the horrible race riot as well as the foundation of the NAACP. This is the second time President Biden has used his authority to set up a National Monument protecting black history, after setting up the Emmett Till and Mamie Till-Mobley National Monument on Emmett Till's 82nd birthday July 25th 2023.
The Department of The Interior announced $775 million to help cap and clean up orphaned oil and gas wells. The money will help cap wells in 21 states. The Biden-Harris Administration has allocated $4.7 billion to plug orphaned wells, a billion of which has already been distributed. More than 8,200 such wells have been capped since the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law passed in 2022. Orphaned wells leak toxins into communities and are leaking the super greenhouse gas methane. Plugging them will not only improve the health of nearby communities but help fight climate change on a global level.
Vice-President Harris announced plans to ban price-gouging in the food and grocery industries. This would be a first ever federal ban on price gouging and Harris called for clear "rules of the road" on price rises in food, and strong penalties from the FTC for those who break them. This is in line with President Biden's launching of a federal Strike Force on Unfair and Illegal Pricing in March, and Democratic Senator Bob Casey's bill to ban "shrinkflation". In response to this pressure from Democrats on price gouging and after aggressive questions by Senator Casey and Senator Elizabeth Warren, the supermarket giant Kroger proposed dropping prices by a billion dollars
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garbagemillennial · 2 years
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This World Diabetes Day marks over 2 decades of me having type 1 diabetes. It is not easy. It is a disability. It does not define me. It is part of me. It makes my life harder. It does not stop me from living a full life
Grateful for my diabetes tech, & for being lucky enough to afford it. It should be accessible to all
Here are some additional annual reminders:
🌀 There are more than 2 types of diabetes—none of them are caused by eating too much sugar
🌀 Everyone deserves access to free (or at least affordable) insulin REGARDLESS OF INSURANCE STATUS
🌀 In the U.S. without insurance a single vial of insulin can cost upwards of $300, despite costing only around $5 to manufacture
🌀 Co-pay price caps do not fix the insulin price gouging problem since high list prices still affect the uninsured & those with high deductibles
🌀 Stop offering diabetics unsolicited diet/exercise/blood sugar management advice
🌀 Stop making diabetes jokes pertaining to sugary foods (they perpetuate misinformation & stigma; plus it makes you an unoriginal hack)
🌀 Contribute to GFMs & other crowdfunding efforts to help diabetics pay for their insulin & other expenses
🌀 Hold Big Phrma accountable for exorbitantly increasing the list price of insulin knowing that those who need it will die without it so have no other choice but to pay up
🌀 Fight for #insulin4all
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kira-akira · 2 months
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Bernie Sanders Introduces Long COVID Moonshot Legislation
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This legislation "provides $1 billion in mandatory funding per year for 10 years to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to support Long COVID research, the urgent pursuit of treatments, and the expansion of care for patients across the country." Announcement on Sander's twitter and the Long COVID Moonshot website.
This announcement references the number 22 million for adults affected by Long COVID in the US but that number is certainly much higher; in 2022 the CDC reported that 7.5% of US adults have Long COVID and that number can only have increased.
Here is an article published today on PBS if you need a primer or a refresher on what Long COVID is and why everyone needs to care about it. From the article:
"Long COVID is a complex chronic condition that can result in more than 200 health effects across multiple body systems. These include:
Heart disease
Neurologic problems such as cognitive impairment, strokes and dysautonomia. This is a category of disorders that affect the body’s autonomic nervous system – nerves that regulate most of the body’s vital mechanisms such as blood pressure, heart rate and temperature.
Post-exertional malaise, a state of severe exhaustion that may happen after even minor activity — often leaving the patient unable to function for hours, days or weeks
Gastrointestinal disorders
Kidney disease
Metabolic disorders such as diabetes and hyperlipidemia, or a rise in bad cholesterol
Immune dysfunction"
I know it's easy to give into despair but THERE IS HOPE for the future! For decreasing transmission of COVID-19, for developing preventatives against Long COVID, and for treating Long COVID. To highlight just a few of the possible pathways to prevention and treatment being currently researched:
The possibility of using antivirals to treat not just Long COVID but any autoimmune disease
The development of N95 masks that can sense SARS-CoV-2 in exhaled breath using a printed immunosensor
A nasal vaccine that halts transmission of SARS-CoV-2 (though does not stop the user from developing COVID-19)
A Japanese research team is looking to treat COVID-19 by using embryonic stem cells to target the virus
The possibility of using already-developed arthritis drugs to treat Long COVID respiratory symptoms
Researchers just identified a possible protein to target in treating Long COVID fatigue
This is an incredibly small collection of studies researching potential treatments but they themselves and the decades of research they are built on had to be funded. In fact, since the pandemic began, more than 24,000 scientific publications about COVID-19 have been published, making it the most researched health condition in any four years of recorded human history.
So there is hope! But all this research needs money. Money that Long COVID Moonshot will provide. And while we wait for research to bear fruit, that $1 billion per year will also be crucial in caring for those suffering from Long COVID in the meantime.
So What Can You Do?
Keep masking - We've just hit 900,000 new COVID cases per day in the US and this wave is not even at its peak yet (For reference, Fauci stated back in 2021 that getting under 10,000 cases per day would allow for mask mandates and safety measures to relax...)
Go on the Long COVID Moonshot website and write to your legislators in support (You can use their script, it only takes 1 minute!)
Keep yourselves and others informed - On the Moonshot website they also offer handy graphics and facts sheets that you can post wherever you can. Spread the word!
And if you or someone you know has Long COVID, you can write in to the Long COVID Moonshot website about your experience
And remember, no one is safe from Long COVID; your chances of developing Long COVID increase with every reinfection. Until research like what Long COVID Moonshot will fund discovers viable preventatives and treatments, the only way to not get Long COVID is to not get COVID-19 in the first place.
Stay safe, stay hopeful, support Long COVID Moonshot, and mask up!
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unmotivated-student · 11 months
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Not on national diabetes day 😩🤌
[Purgatory day 10]
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celluzu · 11 months
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ETOILES JUST PULLED "IT'S NATIONAL DIABETES DAY" ON TUBBO FOR KILLING HIM 😭😭😭
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nenelonomh · 2 months
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oral hygiene practices
maintaining healthy teeth and gums is crucial for many reasons:
prevents tooth decay and gum disease. regular brushing and flossing remove plaque, a sticky film of bacteria that can lead to cavities and gum disease if not properly managed.
maintains fresh breath. poor oral hygiene can cause bad breath (halitosis). brushing your teeth, and tongue, and using mouthwash can help keep your breath fresh.
reduces the risk of systemic diseases. there is a strong link between oral health and overall health. poor oral hygiene can contribute to conditions such as heart disease, diabetes, and respiratory infections.
saves money. preventive care is often less expensive than treating dental problems. regular check-ups and cleanings can help catch issues early before they become more serious and costly.
so, let's look at some key practices to help maintain your smile.
ੈ✩‧₊˚ brush your teeth twice a day. use fluoride toothpaste and a soft-bristled toothbrush. brush for at least two minutes, making sure to clean all surfaces of your teeth.
ੈ✩‧₊˚ floss daily. flossing helps remove plaque and food particles between your teeth and under the gumline where your toothbrush can’t reach.
ੈ✩‧₊˚ use mouthwash. an antimicrobial or fluoride mouthwash can help reduce plaque, prevent cavities, and freshen your breath.
ੈ✩‧₊˚ maintain a healthy diet. limit sugary foods and drinks, as they can contribute to tooth decay. eating a balanced diet with plenty of fruits and vegetables can support overall oral health.
ੈ✩‧₊˚ stay hydrated. drinking plenty of water, especially fluoridated tap water, helps wash away food particles and bacteria.
ੈ✩‧₊˚ avoid tobacco products. smoking and chewing tobacco can lead to gum disease, tooth decay, and oral cancer.
ੈ✩‧₊˚ replace your toothbrush regularly. change it over every three to four months, or sooner if the bristles are frayed.
ੈ✩‧₊˚ visit your dentist regularly. regular dental check-ups and professional cleanings are essential for maintaining oral health and catching any issues early.
i know that i am only reinforcing what your dentist is already telling you - but my purpose is to provide easy information and further reading resources that may teach you something new. by incorporating these practices into your daily routine, you can keep your teeth and gums healthy.
unfortunately, i know many people who ignore simple health facts (for a multitude of reasons). but this is not the way! looking after your health and your body is so important!
for further reading:
Oral Hygiene: Best Practices & Instructions for Good Routine | Cleveland Clinic
WOHD23-factsheet-oralhygiene-EN.pdf | FDI World Dental Foundation
Oral Hygiene | National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research
the original oral hygiene post (by me)
❤️ nene
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covid-safer-hotties · 1 month
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Deaths Are Up Post-Covid, and So Are Funeral Stocks: Prognosis - Published Aug 19, 2024
The Business of Death Aussies, Americans, and Brits — and no doubt people in many other nations — are dying faster than before the pandemic.
Even though Covid waves are becoming less deadly, thanks mostly to increased immune protection from vaccinations and prior infections, the coronavirus remains a significant killer. And stubbornly high all-cause mortality rates indicate that its direct and indirect effects are helping drive a sustained increase in death and disease around the globe.
It’s depressing news, I know.
With death comes bereavement, and there’s been a lot of that since SARS-CoV-2 began spreading widely in late 2019. The number of officially reported Covid fatalities (7.1 million worldwide) doesn’t fully explain the trend in excess deaths. (Neither do Covid vaccines, since body bags were piling up months before the shots were released, and multiple studies show the immunizations protect against severe illness and death).
There’s no silver lining to the tragic loss of life. But if one group sees an upside, it’s those providing funerals, cremations, and burials. Publicly traded companies handling funerals and related services have handed investors an average 79% return since Jan. 1, 2020 — outpacing the 60% gain in the MSCI All Country World Index, one of the broadest measures of the global equity market.
The US highlights the morbid picture. In the two decades before the pandemic, the number of deaths had been climbing at an average clip of almost 1% a year — reflecting population growth and aging, and the devastating opioid epidemic — for a crude rate in 2019 of 869.7 deaths for every 100,000 Americans.
Covid catapulted the rate well beyond 1,000 in 2020 and 2021 before the rate dropped back to just over 984 in 2022. Last year, there were 927.4 deaths per 100,000 people in the US — almost 12% above the 20-year average — for nearly 3.1 million deaths all up.
The coronavirus directly and indirectly contributed to many of them. For instance, a jump in drug overdoses and alcohol use–related diseases during the pandemic likely added to fatalities from unintentional injuries and chronic liver disease in 2023, according to a study this month. Covid also led to more cardiometabolic disease, and age-adjusted mortality rates for diabetes, heart disease, and stroke were above pre-pandemic levels.
Last month, researchers reported similar findings in Australia, where emergency departments have taken longer to hospitalize patients arriving in ambulances — a sign of health-system stress associated with a greater risk of patients dying up to 30 days after their initial medical encounter.
Mortality rates in England have also stayed persistently high since Covid hit, likely reflecting the direct effects of the illness, pressures on the National Health Service, and disruptions to chronic disease detection and management, researchers said in a study in January.
“The greatest numbers of excess deaths in the acute phase of the pandemic were in older adults,” Jonny Pearson-Stuttard and colleagues wrote. “The pattern now is one of persisting excess deaths, which are most prominent in relative terms in middle-aged and younger adults.”
Almost five years into the pandemic, dodging SARS-CoV-2 still remains one of the best ways to avoid adding to the toll — and the frequency of funerals. —Jason Gale
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afeelgoodblog · 2 years
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The Best News of Last Week
TikToker raises $186,000 for woman, 81, to pay off her mortgage and finally retire. He saw her on break at Walmart and recorded her clearly having a bad day.
Devan Bonagura, 19, works for a third-party company that sells products to Walmart, and it’s at the retailer where he met 81-year-old Nola Carpenter.
One comment read: “GOFUNDME ASAP” — before going on to receive 130,000 likes. Devan would honor the request of his followers, and later set up a GoFundMe to help Nola retire. Needless to say, the response was overwhelming.
2. Grandma and man she accidentally texted for Thanksgiving to reunite for 7th year
An accidental text message has led to a Thanksgiving tradition that is now continuing into its seventh year.
On Tuesday, Jamal Hinton confirmed in an Instagram post that he will spend this Thanksgiving with Wanda Dench, who in 2016 thought she was texting her grandson to invite him to Thanksgiving when she actually texted Hinton.
3. Flossie, 26, officially crowned world's oldest living cat by Guinness World Records
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British-born Flossie has set a new record as the world’s oldest living cat. Guinness World Records have officially awarded the title to the feline, who was born in 1995. The cat has had a number of owners during her lifetime, but currently resides in southeast London.
But she’s still got several years to go if she wants to beat the oldest cat ever recorded. That title goes to Creme Puff, who lived to an incredible 38 years and three days in Austin, Texas.
4. Nano-robot antibodies that fight cancer enter first human drug trial
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Scientists in Israel have created the first nano-robot antibodies designed to fight cancer. The first human trial for the new nano-robots will start soon, and it will determine just how effective the antibodies are. What is special about these particular antibodies, too, is that they are programmed to decide whether cells surrounding tumors are “bad” or “good.”
The trial is currently underway in Australia and if it goes according to plan, the nano-robot antibodies will be able to fight cells around tumors that can help the tumor while also boosting the capability of the cells inhibiting the growth of the cancerous cells.
5. Nepal Fights Deforestation, and Wins
This transformation is visible across Nepal, thanks to a radical policy adopted by the government more than 40 years ago. Large swaths of national forest land were handed to local communities, and millions of volunteers were recruited to protect and renew their local forests, an effort that has earned praise from environmentalists around the world.
6. Amazing quote from Richard M. Fierro, the Club Q hero that probably saved dozens of lives
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“These kids want to live that way, want to have a good time, have at it,” he said as he described the night. “I’m happy about it because that is what I fought for, so they can do whatever they hell they want.”
7. First Drug to Delay Type 1 Diabetes Approved by FDA
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Last week, the Food and Drug Administration approved the first drug to delay the onset of Type 1 diabetes.
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That’s it for this week. If you liked this post you can support this newsletter with a small kofi donation:
Buy me a coffee ❤️
Have a great week ahead :)
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murderousink23 · 7 months
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02/27/2024 is World Spay Day 🌎, World NGO Day 🌎, National Kahlua Day 🇺🇸, National Polar Bear Day 🐻‍❄🇺🇸, National Strawberry Day 🍓🇺🇸, Pokémon Day 🇺🇸, National American Diabetes Association Alert Day 🇺🇸
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While November is National Diabetes Awareness Month in the US, November 14 is World Diabetes Day because it’s Frederick Banting’s birthday. He is credited as the co-discoverer of insulin and was the leading force behind the team working on it.
In type 2 diabetes, your body can produce insulin but it has trouble using it.
In type 1 diabetes, the immune system destroys the cells that produce insulin. Onset is mostly during childhood Insulin is essential to turning food into energy, and type 1 diabetes is 100% fatal without insulin treatment.
At the time of insulin’s discovery, the leading treatment was to essentially slowly starve to death. Insulin changed everything. Parents no longer had to watch their children painfully die. My parents didn’t have to watch me die before I reached double digits.
Frederick Banting and his team sold the patent for insulin to the university of Toronto for $1 each so it could be more widely produced and distributed. He famously said “insulin does not belong to me, it belongs to the world”
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