Beach Day With Diabetes: Sun, Heat, Feet, and Supply Safety 6th June 20266th June 2026 by Living Diabetes Editorial A practical beach safety guide for people with diabetes, covering heat, hydration, sunscreen, foot protection, glucose checks, and supplies.
Cycling With Diabetes: Blood Sugar, Feet, and Safety 6th June 20264th June 2026 by Living Diabetes Editorial Cycling can support fitness with diabetes, but glucose checks, low-blood-sugar prevention, hydration, feet, and safety planning matter.
Keeping Insulin Safe in Summer Heat and Travel 6th June 20264th June 2026 by Living Diabetes Editorial Heat and travel can affect insulin and diabetes supplies. Learn how to plan storage, carry-on packing, and sick-day safety.
HIIT vs Steady-State Cardio With Diabetes: How to Choose Safely 6th June 20262nd June 2026 by Living Diabetes Editorial HIIT and steady cardio can affect blood sugar differently. Learn how to choose exercise safely with diabetes and low-blood-sugar risk.
Summer Travel With Diabetes: A Safer Planning Guide 6th June 20262nd June 2026 by Living Diabetes Editorial Travel with diabetes is easier with a supply, medicine, food, heat, security, and sick-day plan. Use this patient-safe checklist.
Best Time to Exercise With Diabetes: Blood Sugar Tips 6th June 202628th May 2026 by Living Diabetes Editorial The best time to exercise with diabetes depends on medicines, meals, glucose patterns, sleep, and safety. Learn what to track.
Post-Workout Nutrition With Diabetes: Blood Sugar Tips 6th June 202628th May 2026 by Living Diabetes Editorial Post-workout nutrition with diabetes depends on glucose, medicines, workout intensity, timing, carbs, protein, and low risk.
Driving With Diabetes: Vision, Lows, and Safety Checks 6th June 202627th May 2026 by Living Diabetes Editorial Driving with diabetes requires attention to vision, low blood sugar risk, medicines, glucose checks, and local licensing rules.
Resistance Training for Diabetes: Strength With Safety 6th June 202626th May 2026 by Living Diabetes Editorial Resistance training can support diabetes care, but safety depends on glucose risk, feet, eyes, heart, technique, and progression.
Fitness Trackers and Diabetes: Useful Data, Real Limits 6th June 202626th May 2026 by Living Diabetes Editorial Fitness trackers can support activity habits, but they do not replace CGM, glucose meters, medical devices, or diabetes care.