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July 6th, 2008
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So last winter, I decided that since I was committed to MDI, I may as well be on the pump. I knew it would offer me superior management.

 

I called my insurance company to find out what kind of coverage we had so that I could decide which pump company to call. I understood nothing the rep told me, so I emailed HR to get a translation. Turns out we were changing insurance companies in January 2008 and unless it was urgent, I was encouraged to wait until January.

 

I started to obsess about going on the pump. Couldn't get the darn thing off my mind and I didn't even have it yet. I would look nearly every day at various pump web sites, compare products online and think about how much easier things would be if I just had the pump already!

 

Finally Jan. 1 rolled around and I was officially on the pump campaign. I thought I had made up my mind about which pump I wanted; that pink one from Animas seemed to be calling my name. On Jan. 2 HR emailed us a link to get temporary cards, and I was beside myself with excitement. I promptly called Animas, where I was told I'd need some blood work prior to the insurance company giving me the OK.

 

So I had Dr. C set up the tests at my local hospital since his office is nearly an hour away. The only test the insurance company required was a c-peptide, which is a test that measures how much insulin your pancreas makes. I didn't know that at the time; all I knew was that I had to have the test and I was willing to do almost anything the insurance company asked.

 

Several days later when Dr. C emailed the results to me, I was too focused on a much improved A1C and having the blood work out of the way than what the c-peptide result meant. After reading over the results several times, I got pretty curious about what the c-peptide test was and what it meant.

 

So I asked. I asked everyone I could find, actually, since Dr. C didn't respond immediately. The consensus was that my result of <0.1 meant I have type 1 diabetes, not type 2 as had been thought for the three years prior.

 

I was devastated, but I really didn't understand why since there wasn't that much that changed. I got over the initial shock, ordered my purple MiniMed 722 (it's another story how I switched from Animas to MiniMed) and am now happily pumping along with Toohey.

 

So there you have it. My diagnosis story in a (four-part) nutshell. Read part one here, part two here, and part three here.



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Michelle Kowalski
Michelle Kowalski, a writer, editor and photography hobbiest in Missouri, has had type 2 diabetes since February 2005. In January 2008, as part of her quest to start on an insulin pump, Michelle learned that she actually has type 1 diabetes.(Read More)

Latest Posts: Can I Say 'No'? | My Bad | Three Airports, Two Searches

Kerri Morrone
Kerri Morrone, diagnosed with type 1 diabetes when she was six years old, doesn't let diabetes define her. It just helps explain some things.
Creator of the diabetes blog Six Until Me and an editor for dLife, Kerri is an awareness advocate and an active member of the diabetes community. She'd also like a kitten. (Read More)


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