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Test Your Knowledge Answers

Test Your Knowledge Answers Build a strong foundation for your Questions appear on page 52. marketing campaign. 1. C: “What is it that concerns you most about starting insulin?” is correct. The diabetes care and education specialist (DCES) should seek first to understand a person’s concerns from the person himself rather SAGE offers reprints of than imposing predetermined values. In answers A and B, the DCES presumes to know why the man is published articles from concerned before finding out the real, underlying an extensive portfolio of reason. Both assumptions present close-ended research journals. questions to the man. Answer D suggests that the man may have used illicit drugs in the past, which the man may or may not answer truthfully. 2. B: “Bingeing (excessive food intake with an Article Reprints, E-Prints, and accompanying sense of loss of control) is the most commonly reported disordered eating behavior in Translated Reprints: individuals with type 2 diabetes. Purging, anorexia Reprints of articles on specifi c products, nervosa, and insulin omission to facilitate weight loss therapies, and topics related to your are more commonly reported among people with company serve as excellent marketing type 1 diabetes (A, C, D). support materials for conference hand- 3. C: All levels of documentation are protected under outs, collateral sales materials, and direct the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability mail pieces. Articles are also available Act. Personal health information must always be as e-prints to post to your website or stored, analyzed, and reported in a manner that protects the identification of individuals. distribute by email. SAGE can also arrange for translation of reprints into the 4. Answer A: A blood glucose level greater than 600 mg/dL, without significant ketones, characterizes local language of your target audience. hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state (HHS). Extreme dehydration, more than profound insulin deficiency, is the primary precipitating factor. HHS develops slowly and does not cause the gastrointestinal pain and Kussmaul respirations associated with DKA (B). Just what your marketing campaign needs! Note: Adapted from Review Guide for the Certified Diabetes Educators Exam. 5th ed. 2019. Chicago: American Association of Diabetes Educators. Reprinted with permission. To order reprints of any SAGE article, contact Barbara Eisenberg at (805) 410-7763 or send an email to reprints@sagepub.com HJ12050278_1123051 58 // ADCES IN PRACTICE // January 2021 http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png ADCES in Practice SAGE

Test Your Knowledge Answers

ADCES in Practice , Volume 9 (1): 1 – Jan 1, 2021

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Publisher
SAGE
Copyright
© 2020 by the American Association of Diabetes Educators
ISSN
2633-559X
eISSN
2633-5603
DOI
10.1177/2633559X20974520a
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Build a strong foundation for your Questions appear on page 52. marketing campaign. 1. C: “What is it that concerns you most about starting insulin?” is correct. The diabetes care and education specialist (DCES) should seek first to understand a person’s concerns from the person himself rather SAGE offers reprints of than imposing predetermined values. In answers A and B, the DCES presumes to know why the man is published articles from concerned before finding out the real, underlying an extensive portfolio of reason. Both assumptions present close-ended research journals. questions to the man. Answer D suggests that the man may have used illicit drugs in the past, which the man may or may not answer truthfully. 2. B: “Bingeing (excessive food intake with an Article Reprints, E-Prints, and accompanying sense of loss of control) is the most commonly reported disordered eating behavior in Translated Reprints: individuals with type 2 diabetes. Purging, anorexia Reprints of articles on specifi c products, nervosa, and insulin omission to facilitate weight loss therapies, and topics related to your are more commonly reported among people with company serve as excellent marketing type 1 diabetes (A, C, D). support materials for conference hand- 3. C: All levels of documentation are protected under outs, collateral sales materials, and direct the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability mail pieces. Articles are also available Act. Personal health information must always be as e-prints to post to your website or stored, analyzed, and reported in a manner that protects the identification of individuals. distribute by email. SAGE can also arrange for translation of reprints into the 4. Answer A: A blood glucose level greater than 600 mg/dL, without significant ketones, characterizes local language of your target audience. hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state (HHS). Extreme dehydration, more than profound insulin deficiency, is the primary precipitating factor. HHS develops slowly and does not cause the gastrointestinal pain and Kussmaul respirations associated with DKA (B). Just what your marketing campaign needs! Note: Adapted from Review Guide for the Certified Diabetes Educators Exam. 5th ed. 2019. Chicago: American Association of Diabetes Educators. Reprinted with permission. To order reprints of any SAGE article, contact Barbara Eisenberg at (805) 410-7763 or send an email to reprints@sagepub.com HJ12050278_1123051 58 // ADCES IN PRACTICE // January 2021

Journal

ADCES in PracticeSAGE

Published: Jan 1, 2021

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