MuhammadII
Member
- Messages
- 24
Want to know if diabetics (both type 1 and 2) feel that enough is done to look after them at university
Fujifilm said:Dear oh dear, those poor students, they have diabetes and have to study and take exams and nobody to hold their little handys and wipe their little botty's.
How are they going to cope in the real world. University students are supposed to be adults.
Schools should cater for diabetics because the pupils are children.
Lucie75 said:I'm sorry Fuji, I disagree, it's not all black and white.
Hahahaha. Somebody's bitter. If a job/working environment is legally bound to make allowances for a disease (and let's be frank, if you're saying that you NEVER, EVER require a few extra minutes/allowance due to a lapse in concentration or some other circumstance, you're definitely lying), then why shouldn't a university?Fujifilm said:People leave school, get jobs and have to cope with the same support as the rest of us.
What makes Uni students different?
I'm afraid I just don't have much time for people who would have me hypothetically endanger myself in order to satisfy either their comfort or 'rules'.Fujifilm said:Pleased to see your education was not wasted. Maybe you should have enrolled on an anger management course to help you stop telling people to **** off :roll:
Useless Pretty Boy said:As for why the coffee? Well firstly, in a form such as a latte, it gives you a nice hit of about 15-20gof low GI carbs - good fuel for a morning which won't produce a massive spike of high blood sugar; and secondly, I don't know how many people have reasearched this, but a moderately high caffeine intake (such as four-five large cups a day) can increase your sensitivity to approaching hypoglycemia.
I call that, all told, a rather beneficial beverage.
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