pew wrote: » Beaumont put forward a list of their diabetic patients and those who had vaccine appointments were contacted via text message with a time and date, what vaccine you were getting and you had to reply yes or no
banie01 wrote: » Same process for the UHL diabetes cohort.
LimerickGray wrote: » Where were you sent from UHL? I’m waiting on cohort 4 respitory problem vaccine.
dubstarr wrote: » Can anyone help me regarding bread. I dont eat a lot of it but i miss having toast.Whats the best low carb bread and where can i buy it.
davork wrote: » My HbA1C is 58 (tested Mar 26th, down from 100 in Mar 2019, and 69 about the same time in Mar 2020). Weight is also down from ~100kg to 88kg
davork wrote: » Vaccines... My HbA1C is 58 (tested Mar 26th, down from 100 in Mar 2019, and 69 about the same time in Mar 2020). Weight is also down from ~100kg to 88kg So strictly speaking, I'm in cohort 4, but who knows ( linky https://www.gov.ie/en/publication/39038-provisional-vaccine-allocation-groups/ with the wording "Diabetes and HbA1C ≥58mmol/mol" ) I have had my first AZ jab, no side effects, but I probably had COVID in Jan 2020 (yes last year) - after catching it in the US (a few of the people I was with also had the same 'bad flu symptoms'). We thought nothing of it, and by the time the start of COVID was pushed further and further back from Mar 2020 to Sep 2019 (by testing water plant stool samples(!)), it was probably too late to get a blood test - not that the GP had any interest in organizing one! As an aside, the brain fog has pretty much gone now as has the anxiety I suddenly gained early last year... For a data point - My Blood sugar has been consistently reading higher across the board, on the same diet and more walking! Thighs are burning more than usual (for me, indicates a blood sugar spike and lo and behold, its gone from 8.5 to 9.8 in the past hour - time for a walk! )
Donutz wrote: » RTE news : NIAC to recommend restriction of AZ jab to over-60shttp://www.rte.ie/news/coronavirus/2021/0412/1209247-coronavirus-vaccine-ireland/ I wonder what impact this will have on those of us who have already recieved a first dose of AZ Will we still be given a second dose after the 12 weeks or will we be moved to the Pfizer or Johnson and Johnson?
CramCycle wrote: » Anyone here from James get called in yet?
kippy wrote: » I'd expect we'd be given a second dose as was the original plan - otherwise it's a disaster and a half.
CramCycle wrote: The impression I got this morning from the talks from NIAC and NPHET were that the 2nd dose would be administered but there would be a longer wait time between doses than expected. That's what I took from it except that we would still be given the 2nd dose at 12 weeks rather than 16 weeks. People who have already received a first dose and who do not have a long term illness would be pushed back to 16 weeks. Not sure if there is data there to back up this stance, but I presume there is (or at least hope). The risk is still very low of having issues, at this point I would take it in the morning but I am no longer a spring chicken sadly.
Donutz wrote: » According to Dr Glynn last night you have a 1 in 100000 chance of developing rare blood clot and a 1 in 10000000 chance of dying. At least that's what I think he said. That's extremely low and I'm a but surprised that they are making a big deal out of it if that is the case.
imfml wrote: » I was due to get AZ in the Aviva today but this was canceled due to the AZ decision. When anyone who had an appointment canceled hears anything about a new appointment let us know! I'm thinking it could be a couple of months though
Harry Palmr wrote: » Jab done now waiting the for the side effects beyond a sore upper arm, also just got my retinopathy done so I've just about had enough of being a diabetic for the time being!
banjobongo wrote: » hi all I have been lucky enough to get the Freestlye Libre and its certainly a game changer so far! I have a very active lifestyle, I exercise every day, lots of different activities.... To anybody in martial arts, can you train with others in a dojo, including sparring, with a sensor on your arm? Same query for wearing a wetsuit (for triathlons or surfing)? (I know, totally academic at the moment but at some stage all activities will resume in the future....)
CramCycle wrote: » I know from my time with the Libre that it held up well with sweating in bike races and it took a fair amount of force to get it off, almost to be leveraged so I wouldn't be overly concerned. Maybe an arm warmer or similar over it to reduce the risk of someone accidentally grabbing it in a throw.
Chris_Heilong wrote: » I have lost maybe 7 or 8 sensors over the years to simple things like removing jumpers and it has pulled on the sensor and they are expensive to replace. I would let people know if I was going to try a combat sport with the sensor on.
Xofpod wrote: » Nope
AhHaor wrote: » Nope