Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD
2016-06-18 11:27:45 UTC
I have both - Diabetes and depression. The depression has been increasing
over the years, and gets to be quite intense.
It is acknowledged that diabetes and depression often go together, but this
is where the comparison gets blurry. I read constant references about not
being able to manage your diabetes as being a "cause" for depression.
In my case, I manage my diabetes very well - low carb, lots of exercise, low
HbA1c - the lot. I seem to be doing the right things. Yet I have that Black
Dog hanging over me.
The key to driving away "that Black Dog" is to lose theover the years, and gets to be quite intense.
It is acknowledged that diabetes and depression often go together, but this
is where the comparison gets blurry. I read constant references about not
being able to manage your diabetes as being a "cause" for depression.
In my case, I manage my diabetes very well - low carb, lots of exercise, low
HbA1c - the lot. I seem to be doing the right things. Yet I have that Black
Dog hanging over me.
depression-causing http://WDJW.net/VAT
Source:
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/alt.support.diabetes/g8hXdE0krH4/7lCQHrYRBgAJ
I am wonderfully hungry ( http://bit.ly/Philippians4_12 ) and hope
you, Henry, despite "that Black Dog" also have a healthy appetite too.
So how are you ?
... because we mindfully choose to openly care with our heart,
HeartDoc Andrew <><
--
Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD
Emory's IMVC.org cardiologist (GA Lic#040347)
and author of the 2PD-OMER Approach:
http://JiL4ever.net/Luke2442
which is the absolutely only **healthy** cure for type-2 diabetes