All You Need To Know About/Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation/Asheville/Researching Type 1 Diabet

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Discover more by visiting our webpage http://savelife.jdrftypeone.com The Health Care and Social Assistance sector comprises establishments providing health care and social assistance for individuals. The industries in this sector include physician's offices, hospitals, medical laboratories, nursing homes, and youth and family service centers. All Video Credits are listed here http://broadcaster.beazil.net/public/credits/youtube/videos/61067 Asheville is an architecturally distinctive city, boasting many buildings that date from the 19th and early 20th centuries. The eye-catching Asheville City Building, completed in 1928, rises from a marble foundation and is capped by an octagonal roof tiled in bright terra cotta. One of many notable Art Deco buildings in the city, the building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Also on the register is the Grove Park Inn, constructed in 1913 of granite stone culled from nearby mountains. No itinerary of things to do in Asheville is complete without a side trip to the surrounding Blue Ridge Mountains. Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation is the leading global organization funding T1D research. Millions of people around the world live with type 1 diabetes (T1D), a life-threatening autoimmune disease that strikes both children and adults. There is no way to prevent it, and at present, no cure. JDRF works every day to change this by amassing grassroots support, deep scientific knowledge and strong industry and academic partnerships to fund research. The JDRF identity was created with these key considerations in mind. We have dropped the formal name “Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation” from our identity and will be known simply as JDRF. This better reflects our commitment to work for ALL those with T1D. The founders of JDRF organization are two tiny women – Carol Lurie and Lee Ducat, who created JDRF for the sake of their own sons and other T1D people. Carol Lurie and her husband played a vital role in JDRF life. Their son was diagnosed and they decided to do everything to find the cure. Lee Ducat organized JDRF for fundraising for the research. Her mission was to raise as much money, so T1D research will start to work. Carol and Lee discussed vital JDRF projects during family dinners. Their greatest accomplishment was Washington. They began to see senators and congressmen and JDRF raised a crucial sum of money for the research. Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is an autoimmune disease in which a person’s pancreas stops producing insulin. It occurs when the body’s immune system attacks and destroys the insulin-producing cells in the pancreas, called beta cells. While its causes are not yet entirely understood, scientists believe that both genetic factors and environmental triggers are involved. Its onset has nothing to do with diet or lifestyle. There is nothing you can do to prevent T1D, and—at present—nothing you can do to get rid of it. While people with T1D rely on insulin therapy to control their blood sugar, insulin is not a cure nor does it prevent the possibility of the disease’s serious side effects. JDRF has led the search for a cure for T1D since our founding in 1970. In those days, people commonly called the disease “juvenile diabetes” because it was frequently diagnosed in, and strongly associated with, young children. Our organization began as the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation. Later, to emphasize exactly how we planned to end the disease, we added a word and became the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.Today, we know an equal number of children and adults are diagnosed every day—approximately 110 people per day. Thanks to better therapies—which JDRF funding has been instrumental in developing and making available—people with T1D live longer and stay healthier while they await the cure. Check our Google Plus account https://plus.google.com/110620633690555176280/ Here are the main points of the mentioned above: Botanical Gardens at Asheville, Thomas Wolfe Memorial, Vance Monument, River Arts District, NC, Asheville Community Theatre, struggle, speak out, The Rip Van Winkle State, Downtown Asheville Art District, Riverside Cemetery, US-NC, Discovery Place, Carline’s life story, aSHEville Museum, Grove Arcade, Juvenile Diabetes, Biltmore Village, Museum of Life and Science, Unity Center, Spring Garden, Bellamy Mansion, diabetic drug, engage, Cape Fear Museum, Blue Ridge Parkway, North Cackalacky, Asheville Pinball Museum, research T1D, Altamont Theater, The Tar Heel State, History@Hand, Center For World Servers, blood test, Visitor Education Center, Black Mountain College Museum and Arts Center, The Center for Craft, The Health Adventure, Bent Creek Experimental Forest, Center for Creative Living, Blue Ridge Parkway, Needle's Eye, Center for the Spiritual Arts, North Carolina Stage Company, Asheville Outdoor Center, Pack Square, McCormick Field, Nepal Institute, Tom's Creek Falls, Carrier Park.

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