CathyMoran wrote: » I have hypos on a regular basis - it gets scary when you do not think that 1.8 is that bad...
CramCycle wrote: » Bad fortnight myself, 1.9 on 6 desperate occasions. Kept conscious throughout but I was a grumpy old so and so, told my boss where he could shove it again Luckily he takes such things well.
CathyMoran wrote: » I do blood tests in front of my little ones - anyone else do the same? My children do not think that it is any big deal but sometimes when insulin hurts it is hard to hide the upset from them.
grindelwald wrote: » Dont count on it! my lady has been diagnosed 4 and a half years she has been on a pump waiting list for the last year and no sign of getting it any time soon
How old is your daughter? my lady is now 12 diagnosed age 7.
grindelwald wrote: » I heard that in egypt they have a little device that goes in under the sking and transmits your blood sugar reading to you mobile phone, you can set it for every 5 mins or once an hour..... that would be so handy, you could know your childs blood sugar readings while they are at school.
ElBarco wrote: » Blood tests I do in front of him all the time. Infusion set changes I tend to do elsewhere - too much tubing and bits and pieces to play with.
grindelwald wrote: » I heard that in egypt they have a little device that goes in under the sking and transmits your blood sugar reading to you mobile phone,
it costs £1075 for the transmitter and the receiver and then the sensors are about £250 for 4 i think. the transmitter costs £500 to replace. you can try it out on a 14 day trial though...
Apanachi wrote: » The doctors at the hospital mentioned something similar to that, they said however that they only measure the blood sugar in the tissue not in the actual blood and are not very accurate, but if there is something out there that gives an accurate continuous measurement in connection with an insulin pump it would be fantastic
Apanachi wrote: » I'll be in Sligo, I'm not anticipating any problems, but you never know what could happen (losing you bag, getting it stolen, dropping the insulin etc...)
fresh123 wrote: » 1. I'm on Glucophage 500 x 3 times a day and am wondering how long it takes to start taking effect? I've read online 2-3 weeks but just wanted to see if anyone saw it's effects sooner as I'm on it since Tuesday evening and am seeing GL drop.
am wondering if diet would be able to have that effect alone?
Sorry if these are silly questions, just a lot to try to take in the past few days.
CramCycle wrote: » Depends on a huge number of factors, the most noticeable is the progression of the diabetes. In very early stages, diet can have a staggering affect but not over such a short time span. What is your diet now, if you don't mind?
kaki wrote: » I'm not diabetic (yet), I hope it's ok for me to post this in here. Has anyone got any advice on how to help someone with diabetes who won't take care of themselves? Dad was diagnosed with diabetes when I was 12, almost a decade ago. I remember that he started off on tablets, but after a couple of months had to start injecting. In the last 5 years or so he's been managing it less and less well, not checking his sugars, neglecting to inject insulin, going out on sessions, refusing to slow down his lifestyle (he has a very demanding shift-based job and commutes from Cork to Dublin, often on just a couple of hours sleep). He's previously been hospitalised on more than one occasion for infections in his feet, ketoacidosis etc... He's now in ICU in hospital again, with MRSA in both feet that may have travelled to the knee in one leg. In addition he had kidney damage that may require dialysis. I haven't seen him as I live in Italy, but Mum said that he's a bit out of it, confused, and very depressed - he was saying at one point that he didn't know how much more of this that he can take. This combined with the fact that he's definitely not a joiner or a believer in talking about his problems. I know that neither I nor my family can dictate to him what to do, check his sugars for him, get him to slow down... has anyone else been through this personally, or had to help a family member who wasn't taking care of themselves? He's too young to be doing this to himself (only in his early 50's) and I don't want him to leave me behind, without seeing me graduate, get married (I'm the eldest at 21) nevermind my other brothers and sisters (the youngest is 7). I don't know how to help him, the consultant was saying that only Dad can turn this around... Any advice/stories are welcome. Thanks.
fresh123 wrote: » Hi CramCycle, Thanks for the reply. Diet since diagnosis is generally: Breakfast: Porridge with Slimline milk Lunch: Salad of Chicken, spinach, lentils, peppers, onions Dinner: One potato, meat and veg Snacks: Bananas Basically I've given up bread, started to eat healthily and gone off the drink. Previous typical day was: Breakfast: Coffee, sugar, whole milk Mid Morning: Breakfast roll with coffee, sugar, milk Lunch: Baguette with breaded chicken & packet crisps Afternoon: Coffee, sugar, milk On way home: Packet crisps Dinner: Tortillas with stir fry & chips In front of telly: A few glasses of red wine Snacks: Biscuits, chocolate, crisps The problem will be sticking to it
gerrybbadd wrote: » Has any of you guys ordered from sugarfree.ie yet? They seem a bit on the pricey side for some products which seem generic in nature. I am tempted though!