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Biggest bugbear



@mountaintom , @therower and @Mel dCP , if you tell me what type I have, I'll gladly oblige and let everyone else know as well. As it is, I was only diagnosed with diabetes, so presumably type2. Started on tablets, went to basal insulin after 4 weeks and quit tablets and started bolus insulin 2 weeks after that.
Works pretty good with me, so I don't really see the need for further blood test to try to find out what type I have as it wouldn't make a difference to my treatment. Blood test might even be inconclusive.
I chose LADA on this forum, as it fits my diagnosis and treatment most. In threads where it might be an issue I always make clear I might be type2.
So what do I do now I know it is so important for you to know what type I have? Ask for blood tests on the grounds that some people on a forum think diabetes without a type is meaningless? Or be happy like it is?

[Edit by moderator, to chop sense into quote merge.]
 
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New name for T1?

PEBIS?

Pancreas
Eaten
By
Immune
System

I’ve taken to saying I’m allergic to carbohydrate (as well as meat and dairy) these days. Seems to stop people insisting I can “have a treat” with cake, chips etc.
 
One of my diabetes bugbears is having to carry so much paraphernalia * around with me all the time.
I should be able to run out of the house with a credit card, phone and door key.
Now I have a bag full of spare insulin, glucotabs, meter, pricker, test strips, pump set change, ...

I sometime wonder about getting a larger handbag on the NHS ... until I think about what that bag may look like

*One small benefit is that I get to write "paraphernalia". What a lovely word.
 
New name for T1?

PEBIS?

Pancreas
Eaten
By
Immune
System
If only the "B" was next to a different key on the keyboard. I might get strange looks if, as I woman, I mistyped "I have a PE..IS"
 
Consultants who don't listen to a word you are saying, and sit there making changes you know are just going to make everything worse.

Or even better, outright accuse you of lying because it doesn't quite fit the story they are trying to tell themselves.
 
Your son sounds like a wonderful little man. I remember when my boy used to make me jam sandwiches when he knew I was having a hypo. What would we have done without them"
 
New name for T1?

PEBIS?

Pancreas
Eaten
By
Immune
System

I’ve taken to saying I’m allergic to carbohydrate (as well as meat and dairy) these days. Seems to stop people insisting I can “have a treat” with cake, chips etc.

Ah yes, but then people might start to believe that the immune system is really a cute fluffy little puppy that misbehaved one day and ate your slippers.

It's really more like it desperately needed the loo, even though things weren't quite ready yet/it hadn't made it to the bathroom, but it went anyway and sprayed it everywhere.

You are evidently much politer than I am
 
Glad it isn't just me. I am going to do that as am now at 16.4 because I did a 1 hour class and underdosed at lunch to avoid a dextrosol dash. Thanks for the encouragement.
I also remember the reverse happening ! My mum made me eat a mini mars bar prior to a running session which was then cancelled. I was the only kid running around the track a few times to burn off the sugar load (fixed doses in those days it seems).
 
If only the "B" was next to a different key on the keyboard. I might get strange looks if, as I woman, I mistyped "I have a PE..IS"
I find taking IOB about half hour before hitting the gym works for me. Half hour plus 10 min warm up and then my sugars start to rise after about 15 mins into workout at which time my novorapid kicks in. As with everything diabetes though, consideration of carbs on board / insulin on board and muscle groups being trained all have to be accounted for.
Good luck and let us know how you get on.
 
@helensaramay . Apologies I have no idea how you have appeared on my previous post.
I really am useless with techno stuff
 
PEBIS, yes @helensaramay, I had that thought too. Easy to say. Hard to forget.
How about IOD, Insulin or Die?
 

Change your consultant or just say no.
I am so lucky to be listened to and supported by my wonderful team. As mine always says, it is your diabetes and nobody knows it better.
 
it is your diabetes and nobody knows it better.

nice statement! Wish I have so nice Doc too. I have meeting once a year, 15m session to check the HbA1c, question about smoking (I smoke), prescription of 50 strips for next year, and done. See you next year...
 
How about we ( type 1's ) keep DIABETES and change the name of all the other forms?
We make enough sacrifices as it is, why add another one?
 
Only setback is.....once you bolus for exercise you've got no cop out from doing the workout session.

OK, here's how I see official DAFNE advice appearing in a few years time to deal with that sort of thing:

"In the event of the insulin dependent person pre-bolusing to counter-act adrenal system driven rises caused by intensive non-cardio exercise:

If it is then decided by the user that they can't be ar*ed going to the gym after all, consider the following options as clinically sound advice to mitigate the risk of hypoglycemia:

(1) pop into Greggs for a steak bake to soak it up. Users should be advised that Greggs are, "all over the place these days", so it is unlikely they will be unable to locate one.

(2) if option (1) is likely to prove insufficient for onboard insulin requirements, the user should be advised to, "nip into one of them Tescos Express, they've always got those Krispy Kreme cabinets at the front."


There you go, @therower, a fool-proof plan B figured out!
 
I think remember 'Con Air' incorrectly portraying symptoms of not taking insulin, but am giggling writing that as not many will remember that film here
I remember that, it was so irritating - he had his insulin a few hours late and was immediately going to die.... Puh---leeze. I decided not to watch Steel Magnolias when I heard that the T1 character died because of diabetes in pregnancy. Don't think I remember a single film where diabetes is dealt with realistically.
 

What about Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters..?
Reinforcing the stereotype...

 
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These posts about films and TV getting it totally wrong are ringing a bell for me.

There's a decent Scandi-noir drama on British TV at the moment, Below the Surface.

Bunch of people get taken hostage and held for ransom somewhere off the Copenhagen underground tram system for ransom.

Needless to say, one of them, Leon, turns out to be some kind of unspecified diabetic.

One moment he's fine, next, after a sharp edit, he's unconscious on the floor. Maybe he's T1 and lost all hypo awareness, let's go with that for the sake of editing.

Anyway, luckily enough, one of the co-hostagees is a trainee nurse. She says he needs sugar: good call.

A few scenes later, they're on the phone to the negotiator (they're fair captors - if a man needs sugar, he needs sugar), but, whoah, then they're ignoring the nurse and it turns into a vague, "we need medicine", which turns out to be insulin, even though the guy was showing nothing like going dka to the point of getting unconscious.

So, a special agent comes down in the lift dressed as a medic, ostensibly to deliver the 'medicine", turns into a gun battle, bit of a mess, some innocent people are hurt, but Leon, who is probably neuroglycopenic hypo by this stage if the nurse's hypo call is right, ends up getting a shot of, erm, something, probably insulin if what was said earlier in the flaky "diabetic drama plotline" is kept to, and wakes up 20 seconds later as if he's just had a nice nights kip -there we go, all better.

Hmm, let's just say I'm unconvinced. Here was me thinking the Danes always paid a lot more attention to detail....
 
As a Scandinavian, I find it incredibly weird how Britain seems to love our TV and movies when I personally find the overwhelming majority to be of very poor quality with bad writing and dialogue etc. I'm not Danish though and even though I can understand them in writing reasonably well their speech is as nonsensical to me as it is to you.
 
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