?? lost me on spelling mistake mr
right hahah with u now ... never heard of that but sounds vile xI know it was just a typo but the resultant word just reminded me of disgorging, 'to discharge or pour forth contents'.
check with ACAS or if your a union member thell sort it for you, if your not in the union join one. try unisonSorry if i bring this up, i read a post earlier today by a teacher who experienced same thing that happened to me this morning.
My day started, but manager wanted to have a few words, said its nothing serious, then went on to say that several people have mentioned that they feel uncomfortable when i take my insulin in staff room, i use a novapen, i eat my dinner, was my plates, then take my insulin, i feel i'm discreet, i take my jumper off and just lift my sleeve, few clicks and its gone, i don't pull down my trousers or sit with a big syringe while i draw the insulin, now i've always as many of you have struggled through life trying to be accepted as having a normal life, but to be told that i should get up and go and take it else where, means i'm hiding my problem, i'm being pushed into a corner so i don't upset peoples peace, I admit i got very angry and upset, felt like crying myself as i've worked with these people for years and felt that they all understood i had Diabetes and accepted the things i have to do, but obviously not, i now feel like i've gone back to the dark ages and struggling to find how i can work with people like this who can't even speak to me about it.
I'm deeply hurt is about all i can really say.
Well said! I agree with @cath99I take mine in front off people if they don't like it then they don't have to look do they xx
Sent from the Diabetes Forum App
But the op is not using a syringe ( so what if they are) but the pen so you can't "see" anything.I sympathise with you and understand how you feel. You don't want to go to a 'special room' to do your injection, because, for you, injections are a regular and necessary part of your life, you can't do without them, and you want to make them part of your ordinary lunch time.
I used to have lunch in a staff room with other teachers, and no one ever complained or said anything at all, but you sense that for non-diabetics an injection is a big deal and some people feel off put or queasy at the sight of a syringe.
Personally, I feel it's easier to cater for those people, by doing your injection under the table or while you're checking your pigeon-hole etc, rather than in full open view of everyone. You shouldn't have to, but other people of the non-diabetic variety are a fact of life, and most of them are nice and just want to eat their lunch without seeing a syringe.
Hi
Your manager is living in the past as are your colleagues, injecting is part of your medical condition.
You could mention the Health and Safety at Work Act, employers responsibilities,
and the Equality Act.
Discrimination is against the law, what more can I say?
John
But the point is why should she go and take it somewhere else? We wouldn't say this to a student if the grounds were for the student going elsewhere because other students didn't like it. At the end of the day, the pen is quick, discreet and most people wouldn't notice. These people are educated adults and they need to grow up. Of course they should be challenged. And the member of the slt team should have been the one challenging them. Outrageous!Many colleagues are probably living in the past in lots of ways. Do you take them all on, though, or do you quietly get on with doing your own thing, because you know you're right, and let them like it or not? Dare them to discriminate?
But the point is why should she go and take it somewhere else? We wouldn't say this to a student if the grounds were for the student going elsewhere because other students didn't like it. At the end of the day, the pen is quick, discreet and most people wouldn't notice. These people are educated adults and they need to grow up. Of course they should be challenged. And the member of the slt team should have been the one challenging them. Outrageous!
It is quite amazing isn't it? I don't inject and am fighting it every step of the way with metformin (reduced from 3 to 1) and LCHF diet. If I feel funny, I test on the grounds that it's impossible to tell whether you are high or low. It has made life a lot easier for the diabetic kids in my class. Now they are open if they need to test and just get on with things in the lesson. I have never heard the other kids be anything other than positive. I don't think it should be hidden away. It should be a matter of fact approach. Part of the norm. I don't make a big show. I just do the test discreetly at my desk. Would do same if I needed to inject too. If I need to eat I do too. Most kids know I'm diabetic as they would ask me why I was eating in the early days whilst it was all new and I was getting it under control and I would just say. I don't believe in ramming it down people's throats but equally I refuse to hide away and be a second class citizen!In my school, ignorance about diabetes was astonishing. I was actually more concerned for the students than for myself, because I knew that I could look after myself - ( well, in theory, I could, though, I have to say, the school day for a diabetic teacher
can be pretty hairy, if not downright obstructive or detrimental to health.)
However, teachers and support staff definitely need better understanding of diabetes, and how it can affect and be managed by students themselves. Handwritten posters in the staff room, about diabetes, would be plain incorrect, and I never saw any colleague reading them anyway.
Epipens and insulin pens would be handed round at whole staff meetings for colleagues to familiarise themselves with, but without the necessary time or group-size really to do so.
A student who was high would be removed from a lesson to run around the field with a teacher/support worker.
Often, a T1 student would lose 20 mins of a lesson in order to go and shoot up, rather than just inject in class!
Once, I was told I had to keep my insulin pen and spare insulin in a locked fridge in the medical room. I put them straight.
There was poor understanding of the emotional effects of diabetes on teenage students, and, apparently, not much awareness of the extent that behavioural issues might or might not be related to their current blood glucose status.
I believe, recently, there has been an initiative to improve the lot of diabetic teenage students at school, but it's overdue, don't you think? As for younger students, the issue of actually injecting, if necessary, in loco parentis, must be another difficult one.
As for teachers, of course they should inject when and where they need to, and it's other colleagues who should adjust. In the past, I've, wrongly, probably, just taken the line of least resistance.
Just wondering if it would it be the same response if you were using an Inhaler, eye drops, changing a plaster on a cut or would you be asked to leave the room and eat somewhere more appropriate because of a severe case of face acne ?, I really don't think so...
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