Clear diabetes education
for patients and families.
Practical, plain-language resources to help people understand diabetes, prepare for appointments, use technology more confidently, prevent complications, and make better daily decisions.
Built to be practical, readable, clinically responsible, and useful between medical appointments.
Website education supports understanding. Urgent symptoms should be assessed by a healthcare professional promptly.
Start with the article most patients need first.
The Education Hub should help patients move from confusion to clear next steps.
A calm, practical starting point for people who need to understand what matters first.
Newly diagnosed with diabetes: what to do first
A calm, practical guide for patients who have just been diagnosed and need to understand what matters now, what can wait, what to ask their doctor, and how diabetes education can help.
Find clear answers by stage, concern, or care pathway.
These cards can later link to full WordPress posts. For now, they define the content structure and editorial direction for the site.
What is a diabetes educator?
A simple explanation of how diabetes education supports medical care and daily self-management.
Read Article →What to bring to your first diabetes education session
Medication list, glucose readings, questions, recent results, and what to expect from the session.
Read Article →Understanding HbA1c in plain language
What HbA1c shows, what it does not show, and how to discuss it with your doctor.
Read Article →What is time in range?
A practical explanation of time in range and why patterns matter more than isolated readings.
Read Article →CGM alarms: helpful tool or constant stress?
How to think about alarms, alert fatigue, family sharing, and data anxiety.
Read Article →Starting insulin: what patients need to know
Education around confidence, safety, injection technique, storage, and questions for the doctor.
Read Article →Diabetes and foot care: daily checks that matter
A practical daily routine for noticing changes early and reducing avoidable risk.
Read Article →Diabetes burnout: when self-management feels exhausting
A compassionate guide to recognising burnout and asking for practical support.
Read Article →When to refer to a diabetes educator
A practical guide for clinicians deciding when structured education can support the care plan.
Read Article →Education content should be useful, current, and clinically responsible.
The Education Hub should show doctors, patients, and families that Sr. Jodi communicates diabetes clearly while respecting medical scope.
Plain language
Written so patients can understand and act without getting buried in clinical wording.
Clinically careful
Avoids replacing diagnosis, prescribing, medical treatment decisions, or urgent care.
Practical next steps
Helps patients prepare for better medical conversations and more useful follow-up appointments.
Turn the Education Hub into a practical toolkit.
These resources should become branded PDFs. They will make the website more useful and more credible to referring clinicians.
First session checklist
What patients should bring: medication list, glucose readings, CGM reports, questions, and recent results.
Doctor appointment questions
A preparation sheet helping patients ask better questions during medical review.
Daily foot-check guide
A simple prevention sheet patients can keep at home.
Articles help. Personalised education makes the next step clearer.
Book a diabetes education session with Sr. Jodi or refer a patient who needs structured, practical support between medical appointments.