Voice of the Diabetic
Voice of the Diabetic
Back|
Next|
Table of Contents|
Home
DIABETES AND BLINDNESS RESOURCES
by Ed Bryant
We've often told you, our readers, that no diabetic is alone, regardless of
complications; all have good, constructive options. Today I want to cover some
of the tools available to help you realize those options.
First is our Diabetes Action Network's principal publication,
this paper, VOICE OF THE DIABETIC. Four times a year, without charge, we bring
you our optimistic message about diabetes, blindness, and the latest and most
effective ways to cope, to maintain or achieve full participation in life's
mainstream, regardless of complications. The VOICE reaches more than 295,000,
in standard print, on 4-track audiocassette for the blind, and on the web at:
www.nfb.org/voice.htm. There is no charge for subscription, in either format,
and we offer multiple copies to volunteer distributors, free of charge. Use
the Subscription Form on page 27, or contact us: VOICE OF THE DIABETIC, 1412
I-70 Drive SW, Suite C, Columbia, MO 65203; telephone: (573) 875-8911.
Diabetes equipment changes rapidly, and lists of products and services are frequently
out of date. Because it is important to have a complete and current list, we
publish and regularly update our Divisional publication: DIABETES
RESOURCES: EQUIPMENT, SERVICES, AND INFORMATION, available in large print,
Braille, or audiocassette, through the NFB Materials Center: 1800 Johnson Street,
Baltimore, MD 21230; telephone: (410) 659-9314; fax: (410) 685-5653; or at the
NFB website. This Resource Guide costs $5 (print, Braille, or cassette) and
is free for downloading from the Web.
Because diabetes is the biggest producer of new blindness and
visual impairment among working-age Americans, we are a division of the National
Federation of the Blind (NFB), the largest organization of blind individuals
in existence. Many of our materials are available through the Federation's's
headquarters, the National Center for the Blind. The Federation has free catalogs,
of blindness literature, and of products for the blind, available in print,
in Braille, and on the Web at: www.nfb.org
The National Federation of the Blind maintains an extensive
collection of literature, on all aspects of blindness, in large print, Braille,
and audiocassette, including the following diabetes articles:
* Arthritis and Diabetes: A Common Association
* Blind Diabetics Can Draw Insulin Without Difficulty
* Can I Eat Sugar
* Cardiovascular Health: Bypass May Be Better For Diabetics
* Check Your Hemoglobin A1c I.Q.
* Diabetic Eye Disease
* Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy
* Diabetics, Don't Give Up On Braille
* The Emotional Side
* Finger Sticking Techniques
* How I Went Blind ... And Then What
* Hypoglycemia - Low Blood Sugar
* Insulin Measurement Devices
* Insulin Types - A Review
* Keeping Your Feet
* Kidney Disease: Prevention, Dialysis, and Transplantation
* Male Sexual Dysfunction
* Many Blind Diabetics Successfully Use Insulin Pumps
* New Dietary Guidelines For Diabetes Management
* Oral Diabetes Medications Update
* Talking Blood Glucose Monitoring Systems
* What Is Diabetes Mellitus?
These diabetes articles are available, free of charge, individually
(in large print) or together (on one 4-track audiocassette titled “Diabetes
Action Network Articles”).
Products carried at the NFB Materials Center include the AccuChek
Voicemate and the LifeScan One Touch talking blood glucose monitors, a talking
thermometer, a talking blood pressure meter, and the tactile insulin-measuring
Lo-Dose Count-A-Dose. Because the NFB and its Materials Center are not for profit,
items are priced substantially below retail.
Many blind individuals, diabetic or not, are unemployed or under-employed.
The NFB runs the telephone-based database search America's
Jobline® (reviewed elsewhere in this issue), accessible, with any touch-tone
phone, at: 1-800-414-5748.
Do not forget that both our Diabetes Action Network and the
NFB itself exist to advise, to offer information. Our network has many Support
Committees, including:
* Amputation and Treatment
* Blindness/Visual Dysfunction
* Get Well
* Heart Disease and Stroke
* Insulin Pump
* Legislative Issues
* Pancreas Transplantation
* Resource Library
* Renal Failure - Dialysis and Transplantation
* Male Sexual Dysfunction
* Women's Issues
For information on our Support Committees, or to learn more
about our Diabetes Action Network and the work we do, contact us at Voice of
the Diabetic, 1412 I-70 Drive SW, Suite C, Columbia, MO 65203; telephone: (573)
875-8911; fax: (573) 875-8902; website: www.nfb.org/voice.htm.
To learn more about the National Federation of the Blind, and its many divisions,
contact them at: National Center for the Blind, 1800 Johnson Street, Baltimore,
MD 21230; telephone: (410) 659-9314; fax: (410) 685-6563; e-mail: [email protected];
or website: www.nfb.org.
Back to Top
Share a Comment