We found 10 result(s) that match your search "diabetes advocate":Search Results
Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Oral Meds Insulin & Pumps Children Highs & Lows Complications Emotions Fitness Real Life
Tags: blood sugar management exercise fears medical ID bracelet
Views: 6318
I've gone back and forth about whether to wear a medical ID bracelet. Part of me says I shouldn't bother because once a paramedic friend of mine told me one of the first things they do to a person who has passed out is to check their blood sugar. Part of me says I should wear one as an extra measure of caution.
I wore a medical ID bracelet throughout my third pregnancy. I don't think I ever took it off -- not in the shower, not for exercise, nothing. I don't remember why I stopped wearing it. Perhaps I lost it. In fact, now that I think about it, I think that's exactly what happened. I had removed the ugly silver chain and replaced it with strands of colorful beads to match whatever I was wearing. Well, the chains and clasps were cheap and ...
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 In the News
Tags: diabetes news humor
Views: 1639
SLED DOGS MAY HOLD KEY TO DIABETES – USA Today
(But until scientists can teach them to speak to humans, the key to diabetes remains a mystery)
BIRD STUDY AIDS DIABETES – Telegram Gazette
(What the flock?)
WHIP YOUR DIABETES INTO SHAPE – Readers Digest Canada
(Summer is right around the corner and your diabetes wants to look hot in its two-piece bikini!)
DIABETES, YOGA, DIET AND HALLE BERRY – WebWire
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Children Complications In the News
Tags: advocate educate type 1 Type 2
Views: 1493
I have to be honest in that I had no clue that there was a Diabetes Alert Day until hearing about it over the weekend. So for 20 years (18 in which I actually had diabetes) the American Diabetes Association has made this a day to alert people about the risk of type 2 diabetes.
Now it all makes sense. It is about type 2 and I am a type 1.
I do recognize that the diabetes epidemic is truly a type 2 issue but all of us are affected and now people that type 2 diabetes affects. This day should matter and be on the minds of everyone. I will say that for many years, just hearing "type 2" instantly made me check out of the conversation. (READ MORE)
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Categories: Type 1 Insulin & Pumps Children Real Life
Tags: diabetes in school
Views: 1364
What the hell just happened?
Remember me blabbing away about being so fortunate and grateful to the school for providing classroom aides for Charlie? Aides, who would blend into the background and seamlessly check Charlie's blood sugar, count out carbs and give him insulin? Remember how Susanne spent the first day of school training the aides in how to use the pump? Remember how we met with the school officials and how they all signed off on the 504 plan? Remember how it was the school's idea in the first place to hire these aides for the very purpose of testing blood sugar and administrating insulin?
Well, forget all that.
Oh, and remember the morning aide who has type 2 diabetes? She has really been working out great.
She's leaving. Found another job apparently. Leaving the glamorous life of pricking fingers and counting crackers.
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Emotions
Tags: being involved diabetes advocate
Views: 1107
Throughout the years, I've met dozens of diabetics. We're all different. We each have our own stories to tell. Some of us were diagnosed at such a young age that we don't even remember what being "normal" is. Some of us made it into high school or college before receiving the diagnosis.
Some are well controlled and some are not. Some of us struggle with getting our numbers down, while others seem to wish it into place. Some follow every rule, some don't follow any.
Each of our stories and our unique personalities make us into the kind of diabetic that we are. Each of our bodies takes on a different role in our management from one person to the next. Each of us reacts differently to the world.
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Categories: Type 1 Insulin & Pumps Highs & Lows Emotions Real Life
Tags: CGMS Health Insurance sensors
Views: 1092
Yesterday when I left work I was ready to rip through the computer because I was so annoyed with a certain medical supply company.
I have taken a backseat to figuring out if my insurance company will cover my Dexcom sensors since I got involved with a company (paid for by my employer) who helps patients sort through these types of situations. I believe my rep is also a nurse, because she is quite often out of the office. So when I'd send casual emails if I hadn't heard from her, I frequently got an auto response saying she was out of the office. This kind of annoyed me, actually.
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Categories: Type 1 Insulin & Pumps Highs & Lows Emotions Real Life
Tags: CGMS Health Insurance
Views: 1071
I should have known. I should have known it wouldn't have been as easy as "Now your sensors are covered. Call XX Medical Supply company to order. Call me with questions."
So, last time I wrote about this, I was getting some much loved satisfaction regarding finally thinking my insurance company had come to its senses about this disposable coverage crap. I mean, really, they'll pay for the machine but not the parts that make it work? Ugh!
So the last email I got from my health advocate, L, said the Medical Supply company had called her and said the disposable sensors were covered under the plan. She broke down the costs based on my deductible and 20% responsibility after the deductible was met. And then basically left it at that, thinking her job was done. And for all I knew it was.
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I was diagnosed just about thirty years ago with type 1 diabetes. Since that hot June day, I've accomplished so much. I've lived well, virtually complication-free. I've competed in individual and team sports, graduated high school and college, established a career, become a published writer. I've practiced empathy and kindness in my day to day existence, I've reached out and made my world better in every way I could think of, in every way I could manage.
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Categories: Type 1 Type 2 Insulin & Pumps Highs & Lows Relationships Complications Emotions Real Life
Tags: (none)
Views: 593
Today, I am participating in Blue Fridays by wearing a blue sweater in support of diabetes awareness. I've never really understood this trend where we wear blue on certain days to advocate for this disease. Who is going to ask me why I'm wearing blue today? Who is going to notice that every Friday in November, I am wearing blue? I can guarantee that answer is no one.
Yet we all do it. We advocate in these tiny, unified ways that show we are working for a cure. We sign up for the Walks, fundraise in a multitude of ways, write letters to Congress, post on Facebook, blog about it, and sometimes never stop talking about it. And what are we really accomplishing?
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Categories: Type 2 In the News Real Life
Tags: diabetes blogs diabetes supplies glucometers insurance mail order
Views: 584
"Freaking the 'danes": In fandom, the deliberate exhibition of extreme fannish behavior before "mundanes" (non-fans) for the specific purpose of eliciting incomprehension and social discomfort. (See: bear-baiting.)
With eight separate phone numbers registered to the two members of this household, it's not surprising that -- despite those numbers' presence on the National Do Not Call Registry -- we get more than our share of telephone solicitations. Most of the time, they're phishing scams telling us we can "lower your interest rates" if we give them our banking information immediately; the rest of the time, they're split between trying to get us to change our telephone, Internet, television, gas, and electricity providers.
Until yesterday.
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