Flu season already hitting hard across half of the US and children’s hospitals are still feeling the pressure from respiratory illnesses

About half of the US — 22 states, along with Washington, DC, New York City and Puerto Rico — is reporting high or very high respiratory illness activity, as flu season sweeps through the country weeks earlier than usual.
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Despite moves to increase supply, families are still feeling the pain of the baby formula shortage

Parents and caregivers continue to feel the pain of store shelves that are cleaned out of baby formula, and many are turning to hospitals and community organizations for help.

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AskNadia: Trouble Sleeping and Feeling Rested?

Dear Nadia,

I have type 2 diabetes and have trouble sleeping and feeling rested. I live alone and wonder if I might have Sleep Apnea?

James

 

Dear James,

 

Sleep apnea affects 22 million people in the United States. Interestingly enough, 80% of these people don’t know they have it. If you feel tired after 8 hours of sleep, you could have sleep apnea.

 

If you had trouble sleeping before your type 2 diabetes diagnosis, the chances are that your Inability to sleep through the night may have contributed to your type 2 diagnosis. Scientists have found a pre-diabetes connection to this particular sleeping disorder. If left untreated, you could be at risk for other cardiovascular diseases.

 

Sleep Apnea Definition

 

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) affects your breathing while sleeping. Rest is frequently interrupted by the relaxing of the palate, tongue, and larynx. This combination relaxes the throat creating a block, preventing you from inhaling oxygen for up to 55 seconds. Once the oxygen is cut off, your body triggers a surge where you wake up gasping for air.

 

How well you sleep, how many interruptions, and how long these interruptions persist can only be determined by a sleeping study.

 

Sleep Apnea Symptoms

The most common symptoms are:

~ Snoring

~ Waking up gasping for air

~ Inability to sleep through the night

~ Inability to focus during the day and

~ Difficulty in staying awake during the day

~ Inability to sleep through the night

~ Feeling irritable

~ Depression

~ Experience a dry throat and or mouth after awakening

You mentioned you live alone, which means you don’t have someone that can observe these symptoms for you. In your case, I would recommend setting up a recording device while you sleep to record all sounds. A smartphone that stays plugged into the electrical outlet would be ideal. This way, your battery does not run out of juice while taping record your sleeping pattern.

Ask your physician if you can be tested for sleep apnea.

 

Sleep Apnea Causes

 

~ The National Institutes of Health (NIH) reports that half of the people that experience sleep apnea are overweight.

~ Men are more likely to be diagnosed than women.

~ Physiological differences such as having large tonsils with a narrow throat. Or narrow airways in your nose and mouth contribute to apnea.

~ Age and a family disposition can put you at a higher risk.

~ Smokers are at a higher risk of being diagnosed.

 

Sleep Apnea Treatments

 

~ Losing weight if you are overweight since the circumference of your neck is a factor.

~ Start using a CPAP (pronounced See-Pap) machine. This is a pressurized air machine with a mask that covers your nose. If you find the CPAP difficult to use, other CPAP devices adjust the air pressure when you are asleep.

~ Surgery may be appropriate to expand narrow air passages.

The dentist provides ~ Oral appliances that keep your airways open and free from obstruction.

 

You might also be interested in reading these articles about Sleep Apnea.

 

1- Raising Apnea Awareness through Sleep Apnea Prevention Project

2- Sleep Apnea Is No Laughing Matter

 

Source:

 

1- Sleep Apnea

2- Mayo Clinic

3- NIH

 

Disclaimer:

Nadia’s feedback on your question is in no way intended to initiate or replace your healthcare professional’s therapy or advice. Please check in with your medical team to discuss your diabetes management concerns.

AskNadia and receive her unique perspective on your question.

Email Nadia

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About Nadia:

Nadia was not only born into a family with diabetes but also married into one. She was propelled at a young age into “caretaker mode,” and with her knowledge of the scarcity of resources, support, and understanding for people with diabetes, co-founded Diabetes Interview, now Diabetes Health magazine.

Nadia has received 24 nominations for her work as a diabetes advocate.
 She has been featured on ABC, NBC, CBS, and other major cable networks. Her publications, medical supply business, and website have been cited, recognized and published in the San Francisco Chronicle, The Wall Street Journal, Ann Landers advice column, former Chrysler chairman Lee Iacocca, Entrepreneur magazine, Houston News, Phili.com, Brand Week, Drug Topics, and many other media outlets.

 

 

 

 

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Diabetes Health

Diabetes Health Type 1 & 2: Feeling Burnt Out? Take A Look at Your Approach

By Patrick Totty

It’s said that only two things in life are certain: death and taxes. But for a majority of people with diabetes, there is a third certain thing: burnout.

Burnout has many descriptions: “I’m sick and tired of the diabetes management grind.” “I’m bummed out by the relentless demands the disease makes.” “I hate facing spending the rest of my life watching everything I eat, constantly measuring my blood sugar, and dragging myself out to exercise rain or shine.”

“People become fed up, overwhelmed,” says Dr. Bill Polonsky, PhD. “When you’re first diagnosed it’s as though you’ve just been given a new job that you’ll have to do 24 hours a day, 52 weeks a year, with no pay or vacation that you have to do for the rest of your life. Who wouldn’t resent that? Who wouldn’t grow tired of it?” Dr. Polonsky is President of the Behavioral Diabetes Institute in San Diego, CA.

There are three main things to consider about burnout. One, almost everybody with diabetes experiences it. Dr. Polonsky says that in his 30 years of dealing with people’s diabetes burnout, “I would say that it’s weird not to go through burnout, at least occasionally.”

Two: It is almost always preceded by months and years of diligent diabetes management that often starts as a honeymoon but winds up in divorce court. You work hard to reduce your A1c, regularly exercise, and eat a healthy diet. There’s a feeling of elation when you reach hard-won goals. But once you get there you can feel like poor Alexander the Great, who, after he had conquered India, pleaded to no one in particular, “What new worlds are left for me to conquer?”

At this point there are no new worlds left for you to conquer. You’re no longer pushing to reach distant goals. Now you’re in maintenance, which is a far different, tedious affair.

But there’s also an opposite cause of burnout. “It’s when you’re putting out your best efforts and still not getting the results you’re hoping for—weight loss, better glucose results, etc.,” says Dr. Polonsky.

There are some external factors, too. Ones that add to the threat of burnout include feeling isolated, that you’re having to struggle and do everything by yourself and on your own. Also sabotage—being surrounded by people who are constantly negative or disparaging about your condition.

That brings us to the third, and most disturbing aspect of diabetes burnout: People who go through burnout often give up completely on trying to manage their diabetes. They decide to stop all the old routines and begin eating what they want whenever they want it, and sloughing off on regular exercise and blood sugar checks.

But there are some excellent ways to prevent a descent into burnout or to make your way back from one. One is understanding how common feelings of anger and frustration are among people with diabetes. Dr. Polonsky introduces this concept when he speaks to large groups: “I ask audience members to describe just one thing about managing diabetes that drives them crazy. Everybody has an almost instant response. I’ve never run across anybody who can’t name at least one thing that drives them nuts.”

The most common complaints he hears is, “My best efforts don’t work.” Or, “I’ve tried a new diet and I haven’t lost an ounce.” “Much of this comes from the numbers they’re getting from a blood glucose meter as opposed to, say, a continuous glucose monitor. Blood sugar numbers can be wacky from time to time for a simple reason: You are not a pancreas. You can’t do what a functioning pancreas does. You shouldn’t confuse BG meter numbers with self-esteem points.”

That said, Dr. Polonsky says that sometimes listeners take his advice about blood glucose meters too seriously: “I once handed out little stickers to put on blood glucose meters that read, ‘Remember, it’s just a number.’ Afterwards, one fellow came up and asked me if he could have 30 of the stickers. When I asked him why he needed so many, he said, ‘They’re pretty small and it’s going to take that many to cover the glass on my meter.’”

Down With 100-Item Checklists!

That question and audience reaction allow Dr. Polonsky to introduce a different way for people with diabetes to think. What if their concepts of proper diabetes self-management might actually be harming them?

He describes “Bang for Buck,” a list of the 100 or more different self-care behaviors for managing diabetes that most people learn about in a good diabetes education program. “But not all of them are equally important and it’s impossible for anybody who has diabetes to do them all.” The problem with trying to do them all, he says, leads either to unsustainable perfectionism—a fragile undertaking since psychologically even one flaw undoes everything—or becoming exhausted and feeling that you’re “bad” because you can’t do them all.

One illustration of how people can get lost in the thickets of 100-item must-do lists is his memory of a young woman with an A1c of 11% who attended one of his educational sessions. She had listened closely and afterwards told Dr. Polonsky that she was ready to get her act together. “Given what you’ve said is doable,” she told him, “so I’m going to start drinking more water from now on.” She added that she refused to take medications. He responded, emphatically, “First, drinking more water is probably number 100 on the list of 100 things you can do manage diabetes. But if you won’t take your medications, which is your choice to make, you are not going to get anywhere with your diabetes.”

Dr. Polonsky knows that the reason why some people don’t want to take diabetes medications is that while they believe there are probable benefits to them they worry too much about the negatives. “But the positives profoundly outweigh the drawbacks.”

He suggests a personal “Bang for Buck” list of the top five to 10 most powerful things each person with diabetes can do to best manage the disease. “Enlist your healthcare provider’s help to figure out what those top things should be for you. Your goal is a healthy ‘good enough.’ Good enough really is good enough. Simplifying your approach to diabetes not only eliminates perfectionism or ‘I’ve been very bad,’ it goes a long way toward removing some of the stresses that lead to burnout. You can’t do it all and you don’t have to do it all.”

Nota Do-It-Yourself Task

“You never want to whittle down your list on your own. You must consult with your healthcare provider. Most people don’t necessarily know what’s most important. When you bring it up, most people will cast their eyes downwards and say, ‘I guess I should be eating better.’” But eating is not as important as your overall numbers, not smoking, and taking your medications. If you refuse to take your recommended meds, you’re out of your mind. You pancreas is pooping out and needs all the help it can get.”

Besides helping people create their own “Bang for Buck” list, Dr. Polonsky advises adding one cardinal rule to the list: “Find somebody in your household or online who’s looking out for you and can help you through the tough times.” Another mitigation: Bond with other people who have diabetes, both informally (say, via phone or Zoom chats) and more formally in a support group (which you should be able to find via your healthcare provider or an internet search for diabetes support groups in your area).

Dr. Polonsky notes that there is a constant stream of terrible news about diabetes, which doesn’t help diabetic people’s morale. “But there’s also good news out there.”

For example, he cites a multi-year Swedish study that compared the heart attack risks for every type 2 person in the 10-million population kingdom with those same risks among 1 million non-diabetics. On the surface, the study results showed that type 2s’ risk for cardiovascular disease was quadruple that of the non-diabetic control group—not at all a reassuring conclusion.

However, looking further into the study, Dr. Polonsky observes that the type 2’s who suffered increased CVD occurrences “were all people whose diabetes was unmanaged and running wild.” The good news underlying the study’s results showed that type 2’s whose diabetes was under control (A1c < 7%, no smoking, healthy diet, etc.) ran the same risk of mortality—not more—as the people who did not have type 2.

So good (not perfect) control can help type 2s sustain as low a level of cardiovascular risk as that of  non-diabetic persons. That’s one great incentive for staying the course. That’s not to say that you can’t take an occasional break. Soldiers who have been involved in a fiercely fought campaign at some point need to leave the frontlines and rest. Your struggle with diabetes is one such fierce campaign. But remember, like any good soldier on leave, at some point you have to return to the fight.n 

Notes:

Dr. Polonsky’s book, “Diabetes Burnout—What to Do When You Can’t Take It Anymore,” is a classic in the field of diabetes self-help.

The Behavioral Diabetes Institute’s mission statement acknowledges that “many people become overwhelmed, frustrated, or ‘burned out’ by the daily difficulties of diabetes and by the unending, often burdensome self-care demands, potentially leading to anger, guilt, depression, fear, feelings of hopelessness.” Learn more at https://behavioraldiabetes.org

 

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Diabetes Health

Feeling Drained? 3 Simple Steps to Reboot Your Energy

When you’re feeling drained, do you feel that it’s a more physical or mental (emotional) thing? Feeling drained is ultimately a wake-up call. The three steps in this article will help you understand how, and create the best way to reboot your energy. By practicing these, you can avoid feeling drained in the future. Studies in the psychology of mind and the practical experience I have gained working with hundreds of different people have shown me that feeling drained comes as a result of a disequilibrium between physical and mental energy.((Cornell University: Understanding the mind)) Whether it comes from conflicts with your boss, friends, family members, or your idea or opinion about your self-worth, society, or life in general, you create a disequilibrium between these two energies. As a result, your nervous system produces chemical reactions (hormones) that impact your body’s physiology, which in turn will wear and tear your body to a point of exhaustion. The process of wear and tear is natural and at the same time highly beneficial as it can teach us how to manage our physical and mental wellbeing.

Physical and Mental Wellbeing

Are you neglecting your mental and physical wellbeing by focusing too much of your energy (thoughts and actions) on insignificant things? Since you’re feel drained, the answer is yes. You’re left with no energy and feeling tired and exhausted. Feeling drained is a wake-up call to slow down, reconsider your approach to external events and how you engage with them. Take your condition of being exhausted and these three steps in this article very seriously. They’ll motivate you and help you reboot your energy, learn about yourself, and use your capabilities wisely.

Why You Feel Drained

There must be something that permanently withdraws your physical and mental energy. Sometimes you can identify what it is, but when you’re feeling tired, it can be difficult to do so. Engaging in activities where we don’t have to put much effort or creative thinking becomes a dangerous norm during times like these. This approach makes it even harder to manage the stressors that bring you to the point of feeling drained. So, what can lead you to feeling drained? Is it a physical activity, like working long hours, running errands, etc.? It may be this, but probably not only this. However tired you get from a physical activity in an average working day, sleeping can help you fully recover from your physical exhaustion. However, the biases, judgments, and misconceptions you have created for yourself are more complicated and require more than sleep to overcome.

Inefficient Thinking

You feel tired all the time because of the inefficient managing of your thinking about things that are insignificant to your physical and mental wellbeing. You approach things that make you less tolerant, less acceptant, and less patient, thus your perspective and understanding are limited or strongly clouded. In my early twenties I had a skewed perspective on how society ought to function. This created a lot of conflicts in my private and professional life, and as a result I felt powerless and completely exhausted. Mentally exhausted. One thing that influences your management of thinking is the fast-paced way of living — complying to the dynamics of modern life — like feeling the obligation of being present online and partaking actively in social media, as well as being active in society on a daily basis. We haven’t really learned how to effectively utilize our precious time, which seems to be dwindling with the development of society.

The Signs and Symptoms of Exhaustion

Physical exhaustion is very simple to detect; your body feels heavy, and the first sign is feeling the need to sleep. After sleeping overnight, the nervous system is rested, and the immune system has balanced all the hormones in your body. You wake up and your physical and mental energy has been replenished.Mental exhaustion is a bit trickier to detect as its signs and symptoms are vary; one day you feel more focused, the next day less. To detect them, you simply must stop any physical and mental activity and listen to your body — be aware of yourself. The most obvious signs and symptoms for mental exhaustion can be physical, emotional and behavioral:

Physical Signs

Emotional Signs

  • Feeling neurotic and anxious
  • Feeling angry for no obvious reason
  • Lack of motivation
  • Lack of productivity

Behavioral Signs

Follow the next steps and create a routine to reboot your energy and make all of the above signs disappear.

3 Steps to Reboot Your Energy

It is self-explanatory that to not feel exhausted or drained, you must not only identify the root cause of it, the stressor((Science Direct: Psychological Stressors)), but more importantly, bring the decision to successfully execute the change and act diligently upon your decision. To stop feeling drained, you must first stop feeling tired. Follow these three steps to reboot your energy and never feel drained again.

The Let-Go Approach

Mostly, in times when significant life changes are coming, drastic measures must be taken. The most significant step for that is taking a step back from the situation. To re-invent yourself, you must take time and distance yourself from all the things you’ve been attached to (the stressors). This might seem like running away from things or isolating yourself, but it only requires letting go for a while. Let the events run without you for a while, and you can get back to them at a later point. Remember, you want to regain your energy and find a new way to manage your life in an efficient and joyful way. Letting go takes courage, the courage to show your ego that things in life can run without you. You may not want to let something go completely, especially if it is an important part of your life, but if it is causing you stress, take a few steps back to gain some perspective on how to handle it more efficiently. For example:

  1. Let go of social media or watching TV for a few weeks.
  2. Invest 60 minutes a day in gentle breathing exercises and smooth physical exercises, like abs and push ups (or any other exercise that suits you).

The Observant-Guardian Approach

You have now reduced the number of activities on your agenda, and there is no energy consumption at the moment. By letting go, you have created a new moment of time and space in your life. When you are able to be still, observe how that stillness helps you regain and recreate your energy. When sitting still:

  1. Take a loving, long, and slow breath.
  2. Recognize the fresh energy coming into your body.
  3. Exhale in the same way and let go of thinking and any tension in your body.
  4. Observe that state of pure stillness and pure flow of energy. Take this state as a very serious one, store it, and guard it, for it is the source of your energy.

Here, in this step, with breathing and stillness, you reboot your energy.Option:If you really think your body needs to move, then create a movement that is constructive. For example:

  1. Walk slowly in circles.
  2. Move your arms over your head while keeping pace with your breath.
  3. Make any slow and rhythmical movements in accordance with your breath.

This movement will enable you to observe your body and thoughts and guard the energy you have just regained.

The Passive Approach

Approach your daily life duties now not by pouring all your energy in, but by passively observing the situation. If you’re involved in a discussion, don’t react immediately. Try to first receive information without exchanging or investing your energy and:

  1. Let go of reacting or acting.
  2. Realize the capacity of your patience and tolerance for the situation.
  3. Look at your existing energy and deepen your stillness
  4. Improve your patience and tolerance.

Once you’ve realized this, accept the fact that you must not change the situation if it’s not to your liking, but act accordingly and do your best to find a solution that works for you and the other party. If you have trouble accepting tough situations, this article may be able to help you get started. This step will teach you how to invest your time and energy in the right amounts. You can integrate the first two steps here as well and manage your energy in the right way.

Final Thoughts

We, as highly intelligent and spiritual beings, should be concerned with the depth and not the surface of things. Don’t let things from the outside exhaust your inside. Let go of them first, observe them, and realize the power of courage, patience, and tolerance that lies within you. Apply these steps and avoid feeling drained in the future. Approach the world with patience. Be observant, and don’t get involved too quickly. Don’t go grab the flower; wait to get the fruit.
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AskNadia: Feeling Discouraged from Peripheral Neuropathy Pain and Depression

Dear Nadia,

My husband has neuropathy and is in much pain. He has tried many things to relieve the pain and has little success. He now blames himself which depresses him. I do not know how to help him.

Anne

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