Grace Weatherby
/ Categories: WELLNESS, 2024

Diabetes Management: What You Do Today Impacts All Your Tomorrows

According to Paula Haytko, a diabetes educator with Southwestern Vermont Medical Center (SVMC), one of the biggest challenges—and surprises—for people living with diabetes is the damage it can cause behind the scenes; damage that can lead to life-altering complications that can’t be undone once they set in.

“It helps to visualize the sugar, or glucose, in your blood like sugar in water,” says Haytko. “The more sugar you add to water the thicker and stickier it gets. It goes from running smoothly to flowing slow like syrup and then basically oozing like sugar-rich honey.”

“If you don’t consistently manage your glucose levels, your blood also thickens and get sticky.  The stickier it gets the slower it moves, the less oxygen it delivers throughout that body, and more likely it is to clog blood vessels. The damage results when cells and organs become oxygen starved.”

She adds, “What many people don’t realize is that even though you’re feeling fine today, damage may be occurring within your body. By the time symptoms of a problem appear, it’s often too late to reverse the course or undo the damage that’s already been done.”

Haytko encourages anyone living with diabetes—no matter how recently diagnosed or how long—to join SVMC’s Diabetes Education Program. Offered at the hospital and several SVMC primary care campuses, the program is free of charge and teaches patients how to monitor their glucose levels, improve their numbers through simple lifestyle changes, and more.

“Diabetes is a life-long condition. It’s never too late to start making changes that will help you maintain the best quality of life now and in the future.”

Unmanaged, diabetes can do irreparable harm to your body. Here’s a look at common complications you can avoid through lifestyle changes and staying on top of your condition.

  • Blindness: diabetes is the number one cause of blindness in the U.S.
  • Non-traumatic amputation: diabetes is the number one cause of non-traumatic limb loss in the U.S.
  • Kidney disease
  • Eye disease
  • Heart and vascular disease
  • Nerve damage
  • Hearing impairment
  • Skin and mouth conditions
  • Dementia and Alzheimer’s disease

Click here learn more about SVMC’s Diabetes Education Program.

 

Print
1006

Theme picker


 

 

 

Interview with Jeff Silverman: 3D Printer

Jeff Silverman is a Wilmington native, a volunteer firefighter, and a business owner. From an addition to his Whitingham, Vermont, farm house, his company, Inertia Unlimited, develops camera technology for broadcast television.

"We make them out of thin air," he says.

Actually, he uses a 3D printer to make prototypes and one-of-a-kind cameras for very specific purposes, including those that sit in the dirt in front of a batter during Major League Baseball games and the ones built into NASCAR racetracks.

Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, Jeff has printed 463 face shields for first responders in the Deerfield Valley and healthcare workers at Southwestern Vermont Medical Center and other places. He has delivered them free of charge.

When and how did you first become interested in printing shields for first responders? In one day, every job we had disappeared. We went from having 20 – 30 jobs to zero in one day. Our first thought was that we would use the materials and talent we typically use to sew the pouches for our cameras to make masks. But we quickly found that the proper materials and techniques were not available to make effective masks. Plus so many other people were making them. They had it covered.

On Sunday, March 22, I read in the New York Times that a company in Syracuse, NY, had made a design to 3D print face shields available online. By noon that day I was printing. Since then the printer has not stopped.

How does it work? The printer converts the design into a 3D object using filament that is the width of a human hair, adding layer by layer. The printer takes 2 hours to print one shield. I have produced 380 shields so far. That's 1000 hours of printing. I take from midnight to 5 a.m. off. We've done more 3D printing in the last month and a half than we had in the previous 5 years.

Describe the shields. It was important to me to produce something that was good quality. Sometimes the ones you buy don’t clean up very well. These can survive UV light and other sterilization. They are rough and tough.

Where have you distributed them? First I gave them to the firefighters in Wilmington and Whitingham, where I am a volunteer. Then I gave some to the Deerfield Valley Rescue. I have sent 324 to Southwestern Vermont Health Care, some to SVMC Deerfield Valley Campus; Golden Cross Ambulance Service and Sojourns Community Clinic, both in Westminster, VT; and Rescue Inc. in Brattleboro. I sent some to a dentist in Portland, ME, who asked, and 10 to North Central Bronx Hospital to a friend who works there.

What's your greatest accomplishment? I went to Wilmington High School in the late 70s, and Dave Larson, who was the social studies teacher and former longtime VT state representative, had a video camera. He let me borrow it to film field hockey games. At the end of the season, they gave me a varsity letter for my film work. I have won Emmys since, but that varsity letter is special, because it represented the beginning.

What's next? We look forward to reopening. For us, it's the easiest thing in the world. No client ever comes here. We didn't lay anybody off. We hired locals. All are full-time with benefits. We think Vermont is a great place for low-impact companies like ours, and we hope more companies discover Vermont and come here to provide well-paid jobs.

And I am really looking forward to turning the printer off.

On behalf of Southwestern Vermont Health Care's frontline staff, thank you to Jeff for his tireless efforts to provide vital equipment to our teams. We appreciate it!

Theme picker


Theme picker


Theme picker


Our Services

PARTNERSHIP IS POWERFUL MEDICINE

A commitment to excellence and a patient-centered approach sets Southwestern Vermont Health Care apart.

 Cancer Care
 Orthopedics
 Emergency
 Maternity
 Primary Care
 ExpressCare
 Cardiology
 Rehab & Residential Care
View All Services

Theme picker

Theme picker

Theme picker

Theme picker

Theme picker