Abstract

Without technology (defined here as drugs and devices) for diabetes management, we would not remotely be where we are today in reducing the terrible burden of this disease. Although for decades effective technology has been available to manage diabetes, the pace with which new technology has been introduced has accelerated greatly in recent years, and we now have a wide panoply of drugs and devices. Moreover, interest in new technology for diabetes is not diminishing, because the well from which it springs is stoked by the fact that more people in the world will probably develop diabetes in greater numbers than ever before, which, coupled with the chronic nature of the disease, means that useful technology for this disease is a high-growth industry.

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