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On 7/21/11 Jean Claude Mbanya, President of the International Diabetes Federation Will Be Interviewed On DSMA Live On BlogTalkRadio - TUNE IN!




Tomorrow, Thursday, July 21st something wonderful is going to happen, an you'll be able to tune in on your computer as it's happening - And actually be part of it!
DSMA Live, the fantastic BlogTalk Radio show hosted by Cherise, George and Scott, will have Jean Claude Mbanya, President of International Diabetes Federation as their guest. .
Jean Claude will be talking about all sorts of very important things, including IDF's O Is For Outrage Postcard Campaign .
I had the opportunity to hear Jean Claude speak at this year's Roche Social Media Summit, and he's incredibly passionate; inspiring & charismatic, especially regarding diabetes and providing children in developing & third world countries with insulin.
You've already read throughout the diabetes blogosphere about Jean Claude being outraged that 90 years after the discovery of insulin, children are still dying because they can't get insulin.
And hopefully you've sent your on-line postcard convincing President Obama to show up & take part in the The United Nations Non Communicable Diseases Summit.
Now you'll have the chance to not only hear him speak, but be inspired by his words.
And who knows, maybe you'll even get to ask him a question!

The link you'll need to log onto the show is listed below - And be sure to log in a few minutes early - The chatroom is always jumping!

Statin drugs - another wonder drug ready to take a fall!

Statin drugs - another wonder drug ready to take a fall!
I wrote about Statin drugs on 31st May 2010. Many doctors have told us that these drugs were so good in preventing heart disease we should all be taking them! They were also supposed to be entirely safe. The usual story from the Conventional Medical Establishment, of course. But now, ABC News has reported that the Jupiter Trials that came up with this conclusion did not support the conclusion! What is being alleged with the Statin trials is that the drug was better, and safer than actually was the case.

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/HeartHealth/cholesterol-busting-statins-study-raises-concerns/story?id=11037926

All RCT trials on drugs (so beloved of ConMed and its supporters) produce raw data. This data has to be interpreted. So who does the interpretation? Scientists. And who pays the scientists? The drug companies.

So millions of people have been taking Statin drugs on the understanding that they were safe, and prevented heart attacks. Now, we know that they have been taking these drugs under false pretences.

This is not an unusual, one off situation. For more information about how information about drugs, their effectiveness and safety, are foisted on an unsuspecting public, look at

Medical Science. The failure to protect

A Diabetes Life....

A Diabetes Life....

A diabetes life is 24X7, 7 days a week, 365 days a year with no vacation days or time out for good behavior and is often measured in units, numbers, and division involving the numbers 12 and 15.

Our days are based on experiencing highs and lows, but much like Hobbits, we prefer to exist somewhere in the middle.

People with diabetes are strong in spirit, so much so that poking; injecting, and infusing ourselves becomes old hat, except when it doesn’t.

A life with diabetes is not a life where one can never travel light. All sorts of extras are required in order for us to make it out the door.

Many who live with diabetes exhibit OCD like behaviors due to the extras they are required to carry and we check, check, check, and check again.

We continually wonder: did we bring enough? Enough insulin, batteries, test strips, glucotabs, batteries, larabars, needles and infusion sets.

We spend an awful lot of time wonder about carb counts and extended duel wave bolus options.

PWDs wonder if the “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” policy applies to diabetes and our careers, our friends and potential dates.

On occasion, PWDs engage in what some would consider high-risk behaviors involving noodle-based foods such as Chinese and spaghetti.

Our collective wish is to own our disease, help others to do the same and reach the highest levels of “Blood Sugar Nirvana".

Our ultimate goal is to see a cure for diabetes in our lifetime.

BUT sometimes we forget that a life lived with diabetes is indeed a life being lived - and before the summer of 1921 (insulin’s discovery) and January 1922, when Leonard Thompson became the first PWD to be injected with insulin, that just wasn’t the case.