Chatelaine

Treatment Advances Can Help People with Type 2 Diabetes

- Original articles by MLPcom Translated from French by MLPcom John A. Sawdon Public Education & Special Projects Director, Cardiac Health Foundation of Canada

When Brenda Hanna was told she had type 2 diabetes, she followed her doctor’s orders, took the prescribed medication, and paid greater attention to her diet and blood sugar levels. But what the 51-year-old television producer didn’t realize was that diabetes could have effects on other areas of her health. “I was widowed, raising an eightyear-old daughter by myself, and had tenants and a demanding job. Researchin­g further into my diabetes was very low on my list of priorities,” Hanna explains, regarding her lack of concern.

Making the connection

Seven years after being diagnosed with diabetes, Hanna started having trouble breathing. It wasn’t until she had to call 911— because her symptoms were so advanced, that she learned she was suffering from heart failure. Despite this new diagnosis,

at the time Hanna was still unaware that her heart problems were linked to her diabetes.

This lack of awareness of the connection between type 2 diabetes and heart disease is common among patients with diabetes according to John Sawdon, Public Education and Special Projects Director for the Cardiac Health Foundation of Canada, an organizati­on dedicated to educating the public about heart disease.

The risk, however, is real. Alarmingly, women with diabetes have a 150 percent higher risk of heart attack than women who don’t have diabetes. Furthermor­e, type 2 diabetes can reduce one’s life expectancy by 15 years, precisely because of heart disease. These were critical facts that Hanna was unaware of at the time of her diagnosis.

New treatment, renewed life

A year ago, Hanna’s cardiologi­st recommende­d a new treatment for her type 2 diabetes that also had proactive benefits for the heart. That therapeuti­c approach has radically changed her life. “Stairs are no longer a problem for me, and now I can breathe much more easily and deeply,” she explains.

Now that she is retired, she is finally taking time to better educate herself about her diabetes. Hanna recommends this approach to everyone. “Read, read, read,” she says. “Become your own diabetes expert. Ask your doctor about the link between diabetes and heart disease, and how they can progress if left unmanaged. It’s a sneaky disease that you should take seriously.”

Sawdon also believes in the importance of patients and their doctor acting as a team, and of going beyond guilt and judgment. “People can’t manage this by themselves,” he says. “We have to accept them as they are and work with them to find solutions.”

By following a healthy diet, getting regular exercise, and following an appropriat­e treatment plan, people with type 2 diabetes can improve their life expectancy and manage their risk of heart disease. With Hanna’s heart disease and diabetes now under control, she continues to do the things she loves like gardening and playing with her rottweiler.

I was widowed, raisin“g an 8-year-old daughter by myself, and had tenants and a demanding job. Researchin­g my diabetes was very low on my list of priorities.

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