Scott paves his way in the world, residing in sunny San Diego, Ca. Wrapped up in life filled with college, hockey, the outdoors, family, friends, and staying healthy. His diagnosis of type 1 diabetes came on March 12, 2004.
Before that first unnerving week in the hospital, he never saw diabetes coming. He aimed to absorb everything there was to learn about this new part of life and take the challenge on head first. Always actively learning and educating in hopes of shining a positive light where it sometimes does not appear.
While easygoing in daily life, he is a perfectionist at heart. Scott takes control of his life by managing his diagnosis and promising to align his future towards success. Trying to offer relatable words, his online blog
StickIt forges ahead too. Diabetes be damned, Scott is aiming high. Self-assured that it will not inhibit his goals, and to this day, he has never looked back.
Today is Earth Day and having grown up in an environmentally responsible household, I consciously make green decisions throughout my day. Turning off lights here, not wasting water there, paper over plastic… any little thing that I know eventually adds up in a big way. A difficult part of deciding on a pump, however, was the green impact it carried along with it. The OmniPod was designed to be worn for three days and then hucked in the trash… really? (READ MORE)
cotton.org
Most will call it dry mouth or cotton mouth , some might say they have a waterless windpipe or a parched palate, acting disturbed by their unquenched uvula, and yet another might compare it to having a mouthful of sweaters mucking up the place to no end. Whatever alliterative or clothed name it goes by, the sticky mouth feel of a high blood sugar is enough to furrow my brow to its limit. (READ MORE)
iStockphoto
Three days, or until the insulin is all used up - that is how long an OmniPod is to be worn for. Before pumping, I was unsure if the scheduled three day replacement interval was going to be a nuisance. I even pondered the idea of trying to sneak in an extra day on the pods- so long as there was enough insulin stowed away in them. Well, that notion, along with a little of my patience, consistently scurries away when I near the end of a pod cycle, and the three day itch sets in. (READ MORE)
Multifamily Utility
It took me nearly two months to finally get a solid range of good blood sugar numbers. Many checks would have me hovering in the 200's, only to be followed by a bottomed out low caused by a flagrant over-correction. The devil is in the details when it comes to pumping and I started out with the wrong details! (READ MORE)
MedToGo
I have a love relationship with my insulin. Every diffused dose I have taken over the years found its way into my system with appreciation, even if it stung like the bejesus at times. Like an addict, the smooth emptying of a syringe or cannula gives me immediate comfort, and I know that my body is staying up to date on its hormonal needs. I know the energy I consume can go to work and my internal hemoglobic labyrinth is not under any stress. (READ MORE)
OmniPod
There was the researching, and the chats with the doc,. There was the mental tug-o-war between my daily injection comfort zone and my need for more flexibility, and now, like the quickness of a self-inserting cannula, I am pumping insulin by way of the OmniPod. (READ MORE)