Prioritizing diabetes visits has become essential as clinical care grows more complex and time-limited. With new medications, tighter guidelines, and multiple comorbidities, clinicians often feel like they are solving a puzzle against the clock. So how can you make every minute count without sacrificing care quality? This guide breaks down …
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April, 2026
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10 April
Diabetes Visit Overload: How to Prioritize What Matters in a 15-Minute Appointment
3,803 views
Latest Articles
June, 2026
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12 June
Why Some Patients Abandon CGM Within Days—and What to Teach Before They Leave the Office
417 viewsContinuous glucose monitoring (CGM) has transformed diabetes management by giving patients real-time glucose data, trend arrows, and alerts that support better daily decisions. Yet some patients stop using their CGM within days of starting. Often, the problem is not the device itself. Instead, early frustration begins when patients leave the …
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12 June
What Really Happens When Patients Stop Insulin Without Telling Their Doctor?
189 viewsFor many people living with diabetes, insulin is more than a medication—it is a lifeline. Yet despite its critical role, some patients stop taking insulin without informing their healthcare provider. The reasons vary widely and may include medication costs, treatment fatigue, fear of side effects, weight gain concerns, or misunderstandings …
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11 June
The Diabetes Conversation Patients Don’t Want to Start: Addressing Sexual Health in Clinical Practice
638 viewsSexual health remains one of the most overlooked aspects of diabetes management, despite its significant impact on quality of life. While clinicians routinely discuss glycemic control, cardiovascular risk, and medication adherence, conversations about sexual function are often avoided by both patients and healthcare providers. Yet sexual health concerns related to …
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11 June
The Overnight Danger Many Clinicians Miss: Why Nighttime Hypoglycemia Still Matters
437 viewsMany healthcare providers focus heavily on daytime glucose control, yet some of the most dangerous hypoglycemic episodes occur while patients are asleep. Despite major advances in insulin therapy and glucose monitoring, nocturnal hypoglycemia remains a significant clinical concern for people living with diabetes. Because symptoms often go unnoticed during sleep, …
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10 June
The Diabetes Treatment Barrier Nobody Sees: When Prescriptions Are Never Filled
778 viewsWhen a healthcare provider writes a prescription for diabetes medication, most assume the treatment journey has begun. However, for many patients, the process never moves beyond the prescription pad. This hidden problem, often discussed as primary nonadherence in diabetes care, occurs when patients fail to obtain a newly prescribed medication. …
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More Articles
June, 2026
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10 June
Could Hearing Loss Be an Early Warning Sign of Future Diabetes Complications?
472 viewsFor many people living with diabetes, complications such as retinopathy, nephropathy, and neuropathy are well-recognized concerns. However, growing evidence suggests that hearing loss may deserve a place on that list as well. Researchers are increasingly examining whether hearing loss reflects the same vascular and neurologic damage that contributes to complications …
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9 June
What Your Patient’s Skin May Be Telling You About Their Diabetes Risk
850 viewsThe skin is often described as a window into overall health, and in patients with diabetes or prediabetes, it may provide some of the earliest visible signs of underlying metabolic dysfunction. While laboratory testing remains the cornerstone of diabetes diagnosis, clinicians who recognize key skin manifestations of diabetes can identify …
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9 June
Constipation, Bloating, and Diabetes: Could Autonomic Neuropathy Be the Cause?
444 viewsMany people with diabetes expect complications such as retinopathy, kidney disease, or peripheral neuropathy. However, gastrointestinal symptoms often receive far less attention despite their significant impact on quality of life. Chronic constipation, bloating, abdominal discomfort, and irregular bowel habits affect a substantial number of individuals living with diabetes. In many …
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8 June
The Diabetes Complication Patients Rarely Mention: Understanding Urinary Incontinence
1,818 viewsUrinary incontinence is one of the most common yet least discussed complications of diabetes. In fact, diabetes urinary incontinence affects people with diabetes at significantly higher rates than the general population. While healthcare professionals routinely monitor patients for retinopathy, nephropathy, and cardiovascular disease, bladder dysfunction often remains overlooked. However, research …
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8 June
Post-Meal Blood Sugar Spikes: Are We Focusing on the Wrong Diabetes Numbers?
349 viewsFor decades, A1C has served as the cornerstone of diabetes management. It remains an essential marker because it reflects average blood glucose levels over approximately three months. However, many clinicians are recognizing that managing post-meal glucose levels may provide equally important insights into a patient’s metabolic health. A person can …
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5 June
When Depression Treatment Conflicts With Diabetes Management
2,692 viewsDepression and diabetes management often overlap in ways that make treatment decisions more complicated. Patients with type 2 diabetes frequently experience depression, and depression can make daily self-care harder. However, some commonly prescribed antidepressants and psychotropic medications may contribute to weight gain, worsen insulin resistance, or complicate long-term metabolic control. …
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5 June
Fasting With Diabetes: How Clinicians Can Reduce Hypoglycemia and DKA Risk
3,720 viewsPatients with diabetes are increasingly exploring fasting for religious, cultural, and metabolic health reasons. From Ramadan observance to intermittent fasting trends, many individuals choose to abstain from food and fluids for extended periods despite potential risks. For clinicians, this creates an important challenge. Simply advising patients not to fast often …
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4 June
The Corticosteroid Conundrum: Managing Steroid-Induced Hyperglycemia in Primary Care
13,208 viewsPatients treated with corticosteroids for asthma, COPD exacerbations, rheumatologic disease, inflammatory bowel disease, or cancer-related complications often develop significant elevations in blood glucose. In many cases, these patients have no prior history of diabetes. Yet within days of therapy initiation, blood glucose levels can rise dramatically, creating a challenging clinical …
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4 June
Why High-Intensity Exercise Can Spike Blood Sugar in Diabetes
5,930 viewsA patient finishes a hard workout, checks their glucose monitor, and feels completely confused. Instead of seeing lower blood sugar after exercise, the reading is suddenly much higher. While this reaction may seem alarming, it is actually a common response to intense physical activity in people with diabetes. Certain workouts …
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3 June
Diabulimia in Type 1 Diabetes: The Warning Signs Clinicians Often Miss
5,522 viewsPatients with type 1 diabetes already face the daily burden of balancing insulin, food intake, exercise, and glucose monitoring. However, for some individuals, insulin becomes more than a treatment tool. It becomes a method for weight control. This dangerous behavior, commonly referred to as diabulimia, involves the intentional restriction or …
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