- Messages
- 1,416
- Location
- Suffolk UK
- Type of diabetes
- Don't have diabetes
- Treatment type
- I do not have diabetes
- Dislikes
- Intolerance, selfishness, rice pudding
As you can see, some of this goes back to 1959! I'm trying to download a photo of R.D.Lawrence's The Diabetic ABC which I'm pretty sure is what @kevinfitzgerald is talking about. The carbs were in red type and all else were in black! Note the foil needle case in the older syringe box, also made by Hypoguard of Trimley, near Felixstowe. The Everett syringes were pre U100. All in my mad diabetic museum - I can't leave go!
A great pleasure @Jaylee I'm going to have another shot at the book for @kevinfitzgeraldWow! There it is.. The sky blue syringe case. (Top centre.) & the needle box.. Thanks for sharing this @Grant_Vicat ,
A real blast from the past..
Thank you! I think ALL diabetics have some inner pride for dealing with a relentless aggressor. Good luck!I really admire and have great respect for all of you T1s who have suffered and endured so much over the years!
A great pleasure which is apparently a swelling of the neck @Jaylee I'm going to have another shot at the book for @kevinfitzgerald
I'm not sure what "A great pleasure which is actually a swelling in the neck" is about!! How the hell did that happen?!Found it. It is actually 1971 (well nearly 50 years old) It called Living with Diabetes (A guide for new Diabetics) Issued by the Welcome Foundation. Great photos of a woman injecting into her thigh and photos showing all the different types of Insulin Vials we used back then.
The standard insulin syringe was the B.S 1619 (I think that's the year! Ha)
I also have a 1957 Household Encyclopedia from 1957 with the list of foods "not allowed" Included are "all starchy foods including bread, potatoes, pasta, rice (see they had low carb already sorted in 57 Ha!) Veg such as peas, carrots, parsnips, broad beans, cabbage, beetroot, all fruit!!! milk, ale, spirits............................ Water and Air.... That was a joke!.
Just for info before Diabetes in this book is DERBYSHIRE NECK (or Goitre) which apparently is a swelling of the neck just below the Adams Apple and unbelievably is most common in young females!!!!!!!! It honestly sates that!!!!
And after Diabetes in this book is DIANTHUS which is a compact Border Plant....
Well I never!......
I'm not sure what "A great pleasure which is actually a swelling in the neck" is about!! How the hell did that happen?!
I remember that being advertised in the British Diabetic Association Magazine for 29s/6d which is £1.47.5p before inflating the price to today's money. When you think that you could buy a 4 fingered KitKat for 2.5p then, it makes you realise what you'd pay for sheer mental torture!View attachment 25398
Don't forget the Palmer Injector. Many a time the needle would shoot off the end of the syringe!
View attachment 25398
Don't forget the Palmer Injector. Many a time the needle would shoot off the end of the syringe!
Strangely I actually loved cleaning mine. Boiling it and taking it apart as though it was a riffle (though I've never taken apart a riffle, but I've seen it on TV!) I was diagnosed in 1981..
View attachment 25398
Don't forget the Palmer Injector. Many a time the needle would shoot off the end of the syringe!
I can not understand why anyone in the 1980's would boil syringes or needles as the industrial spirit kept everything sterile I was diagnosed in 1965 and can not remember ever having my needles or syringes boiled.
My mum bought one of those for me,i hated it.We only used it twice.I was diagnosed in 1976,prehistoric times for sure.View attachment 25398
Don't forget the Palmer Injector. Many a time the needle would shoot off the end of the syringe!
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