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Diabetes resolutions for the New Year

diabetes resolutions for the new year

Do you need some help making a change for the new year? Read on to get some tips on how you might be able to make this happen!

The beginning of a new year is a perfect time to think about establishing new personal goals, or change habits. Some would say: “My New Year’s resolution is to take care of my overall health, especially managing my diabetes”. By saying these words and working on a plan, the beginning of a new year can be seen as a new beginning.

Diabetes resolutions for the New Year are a good way of getting back on the diabetes management track, especially after the holiday season. Diabetes management can be very daunting. Managing diabetes means: making healthy food choices; watching weight and glucose level targets; taking medication; being physically active; and coping with stress levels. Even for people who are aware of how to improve their health and manage diabetes, figuring it out and learning how best to fit it into the daily routine can be a big challenge. What part of the management process do you wish to start on?

Steps to help you make a change

1. What piece of the diabetic management process is important to you and your health?
2. Choose one goal to work on first.
3. Identify the steps to take to reach the goal, such as a walk a day. How long can you walk for? What time of the day works best? Where can I go for a walk? What clothes do I need to wear?
4. Do not give up. Change takes time. Please remember - it is very hard for a person to change and adapt immediately. Sometimes the change starts to occur, so it may become one step forward to change and then two steps back. Consistent change can take a long time to occur. Sometimes up to seven times of one step forward to two steps back behaviour before effective permanent change.
5. Looking at the goal and the steps to reach the goal as an experiment. If the experiment does not work the first time, review and change and establish a new experiment. Viewing it in this way may decrease the expectation and feeling of failure when consistent change does not occur.

SMART goals
Self-managing diabetes, whether type 1, type 2 or gestational diabetes, can be very challenging and empowering at the same time.

Getting help with your New Year’s resolution

1. Talk with your family members, friends, and/or work colleagues about your resolution. You may find others who want to go for walks, lose weight or want help as well with managing their diabetes
2. Join a type 1 or type 2 support group
3. Discuss your plan with your diabetes team nurse, dietitian, pharmacist, social worker, physiotherapist, and/or endocrinologist
4. Write down your plan and post it on the fridge
5. Congratulate yourself on any progress
6. Remember small steps

Good luck!!

food journal
A new year often brings new resolutions. For many, a New Year resolution is to lose weight. For some, this resolution is made annually, with little success.

About Cheryl Harris-Taylor

Cheryl Harris-Taylor BSW, MSW, RSW has recently retired from the Endocrinology program at Women’s College Hospital. During her time in this position, she has become involved in the psychosocial and behavioral issues of diabetes, helping a diverse population cope and adjust their lifestyle to be able to manage their diabetes. She continues to stay informed with the ever-changing world of diabetes and the affects this illness has on individuals. Ms. Harris-Taylor received her Master of Clinical Social Work degree from the University of Calgary. After graduating, she worked in Calgary in Child Welfare and then moved to the Netherlands where she established her own private practice. Fifteen years ago, she and her family moved to Toronto where she started work in hospital settings, first in psychiatry, then in the prenatal department, and later working with seniors, advocating for better services. Ms. Harris-Taylor enjoys challenges and stimulation in her life. One specific accomplishment was climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro in 2009.

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