Hi Howie
I am approaching my 40th year as a Type 1 diabetic and so far I am fully functioning and on a good day everything still works! :lol:
Whilst echoing previous replies to your posting that getting good control of blood glucose levels is paramount I would also add
One of the other single most powerful things a diabetic can do is NOT TO SMOKE.
When I commenced my professional career I worked on a male hospital ward – in those days i.e. early 1980’s patients were allowed to smoke on the hospital wards! :shock: Seems absolutely staggering to think that happened but it did.
We also had no “piped oxygen” unlike the modern facilities we have today. Instead whoever needed oxygen would have an oxygen cylinder placed at their bedside with a large notice stating "DO NOT SMOKE OXYGEN IN USE" while the patient in the next bed was lighting up and puffing away! :shock:
This ward housed mostly smoking diabetic patients with missing limbs. After I completed my time their the nursing tutor who knew I was diabetic informed me they had put me there as a test! Not sure that would be “allowed” these days. :!:
The complications associated with diabetes that are thrust out all the time also do not take into account very positive advances such as home blood glucose testing, HBA1C’s, and screening.
Screening does save lives and if you ensure you have regular check ups then at least potential complications can be picked up early.
The reality is that many many people with diabetes & many other medical disorders just do not attend for their hospital/GP appointments. :evil:
There are many reasons for DNA’s (Did not attend) hospital appointments, which for the purpose of this reply I am not going to go into but as someone who wants to optimise his health I am pretty sure you will attend all your appointments.
I was very fortunate to undergo prophylactic laser eye treatment way back in 1992 as part of a clinical trial – with the aid of my trusty spectacles I have no major eye complications – just a tiny hint of a peripheral cataract – but I may have got that anyhow.
Next year I will celebrate 40 years on insulin and I am damned determined that I will
Get to 50 years and get my Insulin Medal.
Wishing you all the best.
Txx