Hi, thank you. The consultant has just advised us to change the Levemir, so it is given in the morning rather than night, as the majority of hypo's are happening then and to reduce this by 1 unit. Hopefully this will all help.@Tj1, there's a UK support group called Children with Diabetes, it offers support and advise to people like yourself and may be worth getting in touch with:
http://www.childrenwithdiabetesuk.org/
I'd get in touch with his hospital diabetes team tomorrow and explain what is happening with his bg levels, they'll advise you on adjusting his insulin doses. Best wishes.
Thank you, very helpful advice.I'm only a child but I know what your son is going through I used to have hypos all he time and they said I was in the honeymoon period and he's probably very active as well try to get him to calm down and maybe have a few snacks now and then I used to get them all the time in school because I couldn't eat anything in between my lessons also to try and get him to calm down get him something that he has to sit down with or put on a TVs show also try and get him some some different carry cases there not cheap but it will be worth it if you see a smile on his face when he does blood glucose tests I recommend funky pumpers if he does not want to eat go to a shop and go around to see what he wants that he will have during hypos I recommend caprisons and haribos hope this helped
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