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Could preventing hypos in hospital reduce inpatient time?
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<blockquote data-quote="Tophat1900" data-source="post: 2146721" data-attributes="member: 362123"><p>Agreed, last time I was in hospital for a minor surgery I was lucky to be left to treating my condition as I felt needed. Just an over night stay for me, home next morning. I didn't get anything to eat even after surgery was done in the morning at all that day or night. I was given breakfast, which was weetbix, toast, jam, margarine, banana, whole milk, apple juice and a pudding of some description, nothing I'd consider eating. Luckily my wife brought in food I'd normally be able to eat that didn't require a huge amount of insulin to process. I did manage a few cups of coffee from the morning nurse who was also a keto eater, who described the food I was offered as something similar to what comes out the back end of a bull. So, had a good chat with her.... but hospital food is what it is. The treatment part of it, I was pretty lucky to be able to decide what to do.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Tophat1900, post: 2146721, member: 362123"] Agreed, last time I was in hospital for a minor surgery I was lucky to be left to treating my condition as I felt needed. Just an over night stay for me, home next morning. I didn't get anything to eat even after surgery was done in the morning at all that day or night. I was given breakfast, which was weetbix, toast, jam, margarine, banana, whole milk, apple juice and a pudding of some description, nothing I'd consider eating. Luckily my wife brought in food I'd normally be able to eat that didn't require a huge amount of insulin to process. I did manage a few cups of coffee from the morning nurse who was also a keto eater, who described the food I was offered as something similar to what comes out the back end of a bull. So, had a good chat with her.... but hospital food is what it is. The treatment part of it, I was pretty lucky to be able to decide what to do. [/QUOTE]
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