Journal article
Ageing well with diabetes: the role of technology
G Maltese, SA McAuley, S Trawley, AJ Sinclair
Diabetologia | Published : 2024
Abstract
Over the past two decades there has been a substantial rise in the adoption of diabetes therapeutic technology among children, adolescents and younger adults with type 1 diabetes, and its use is now also advocated for older individuals. Older people with diabetes are more prone to experience hypoglycaemia because of numerous predisposing factors and are at higher risk of hypoglycaemic events requiring third-party assistance as well as other adverse sequelae. Hypoglycaemia may also have long-term consequences, including cognitive impairment, frailty and disability. Diabetes in older people is often characterised by marked glucose variability related to age-associated changes such as variable ..
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Grants
Awarded by JDRF
Funding Acknowledgements
No funding was received for this work. Related work under-taken by SAM's research group has been supported by funding from Breakthrough T1D (formerly JDRF; grants 5-ECR-2017-371-A-N and 3-SRA-2018-667-M-R) and the Diabetes Australia Research Program.