At 14 years old, Megan Cory was eating much more than her age would suggest, but losing an alarming amount of weight. She remembers always being thirsty and being fatigued.

After smelling the sweetness on her breath and hearing about her other symptoms, Cory’s physician was able to diagnose her with diabetes.

Cory, now the student life chair of American Medical Students Association Premedical Chapter at UCLA, is organizing the first Diabetes Day in Bruin Plaza on Tuesday.

“People hear all of these things, like in the movies (about diabetes), and they don’t take the time to look into it,” said Cory, a third-year biochemistry student. “I want people to learn that, yes, diabetes is a serious disease, but it is manageable.”

Every six seconds a person dies from diabetes, and about 382 million people in the world suffer from the disease, according to the International Diabetes Federation.

Cory has type 1 diabetes, which means her body does not produce enough insulin. Those with type 2 diabetes do not respond properly to insulin.

Cory planned activities and games for Tuesday’s event, such as spin the wheel and word searches, with tips for type 2 prevention and type 1 management. The games include suggestions for an active lifestyle and blood glucose monitoring.

Through the event, Cory hopes to educate people about the disease and how to manage it. They are also raising money through a raffle and donations will go to the Larry Hillblom Islet Research Center, a UCLA diabetes research center.

Melinda Ng, a second-year biochemistry student who also helped organize the event, said she plans to volunteer during Diabetes Day.

“My grandmother has diabetes, so I have personal reasons (for helping),” Ng said. “I always thought there was a lot of research for diabetes, but after working on this I realized that there is not much funding and that it is decreasing.”

A large painting made by a high school student Cory tutors will be displayed for people who donate money or have loved ones with diabetes to sign, she said.

“The painting is supposed to represent how when we all come together, we can make a difference,” Cory said.

Rebecca Bucher, a fourth-year English student, is helping to organize a flash mob for the event. She got involved with the event because she knows several people with the disease and wanted to do something proactive to help.

“In going to the event, you are actually helping and not just staring at a big problem that can’t be solved,” Bucher said. “You’re actually making a difference because awareness is the most important way to help prevent and manage the disease.”

The event, which cost $200, will be funded by Ella Fitzgerald Charitable Foundation, Staples and other sponsors, Cory said.

Eventually, she wants to establish a student group on campus called Diabeaters at UCLA, and is planning to use Diabetes Day as a platform to launch it. So far, she has a website set up for up-to-date diabetes research developments under the group’s name.

Because of her diagnosis, Cory said she is passionate about diabetes research. She remembers how scared she was when she was first diagnosed.

“But after that moment, I didn’t want to get upset until I learned more about it,” Cory said. “I wanted to learn how to use it to my advantage.”

She asked her doctors about the disease and discovered how little changes to her lifestyle can help manage her health.

Upon hearing the news of Cory’s diagnosis, her mother fainted and her brother cried at the hospital, her mother Samar Khoury said.

Her family learned to embrace and incorporate it into their own lives as well by picking up all of the same habits, such as calorie counting and exercising, Khoury said.

The family moved to Los Angeles from Texas to be near Cory and have been working alongside her to make the event a success. They tried to make her goal of putting on this event a reality by making copies of fliers and calling sponsors for her when she was in class.

“People with diabetes aren’t held back,” Cory said. “You are the one who holds you back, not the disease.”

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  1. If you repeat a lie often enough, it becomes the truth, right? the Democrats’ great accomplishment is producing the political equivalent of a Rodney King video, clearly demonstrating the lies of the right, the right Hilary Clinton correctly identified as a vast conspiracy. Confirm by examining Central District of California Cases, 01-4340, 03-9097, 08-5515, 10-5193, US Tax Court 12000-07L –though I think you want to view my US Tax Court Appeal to the 9th Circuit for a good account of their day to day assaults, a few month time slice indicative of a decade of assault, and 9th Circuit case 11-56043.

    Typically operating through Puppets–including puppets in the judiciary–the right wing has for decades been committing crimes and trying to classify them to cover them up, a move explicitly forbidden by the Code of Federal Regulations. The right has accomplished its political objectives by presenting a fraction of the evidence to judicial officials who, having seen the pattern dozens of times before, could not help but realize that they were being presented with incomplete and inaccurate information. With either the willfully blind approval or the willful ignorance of the judiciary the right has killed & stolen several of my pets and routinely shoot energy weaponry at me and my pets, despite my calls to the police, the FBI, Congress, and despite my petitions in court. There is really only one solution, and that’s to disempower them politically.

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