After giving it up, the 5 aspects that I have commented are the ones that have caught my attention ... but other things are still missing, I think that in the coming weeks I can write the second part.
I would like to stop bombs and sensors because I think it gives for the debate.
It is that in the theme of needles there is material ... the "problem" is that it is observational, not scientific (as a scientific method: blind, randomized, etc.)
That is why the serious thing is that without scientific evidence they are able to make 2 recommendations of that style: reuse the needles and puncture over the clothes ... is that it is amazing.
GPCs are updated when there is scientific evidence that justifies it ... although the guide itself declares that they seek to adapt it every 5 years.
This gives a lot of debate, but one of our defects as patients and as patient associations is to place ourselves at a lower level than doctors and medical societies.We are neither superiors nor are we lower.
I do not say it for you, Gondrullo ... I say it in general.
Medicine, medical literature, is not the exclusive heritage of graduates in medicine ... much less in something like diabetes.
I have to look for an article where he talks about this:-/ ... it was a very good study where medical-patient relationships measured;Those with horizontal relationships based on trust and mutual help obtained better health results than those in which the relationship was vertical and was based on the hierarchy.
If my doctor prescribes something to me, I have to justify me why he chooses that and offer me more information, even being able to participate in my own treatment (within the logical health margins).
I am sure that the same type of collaboration could be done in the entities ... In fact, the advisory advice of diabetes (what times with the Fed) have been a good idea, until they stopped being joint and each one went on their own.
Anyway, that I roll up and then nobody reads my wandering.
I find the idea of the guide fantastic, with many aspects to improve, with good intentions both in its elaboration (consultation of patients), their dissemination (they seem to make presentations in different places, but I have not seen any) as in theirFinal result (with many pastes).
The problem is that he reminds me of the national diabetes strategy ... In the end nobody pays attention to him, nor does it work for anything.