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GCSE biology textbook - diabetes section...


The kids'll love that, I know I would have at that age.
 
That's certainly more than I knew before diagnosis.
 
It could do with discriminating between autoimmune and insulin resistance. Pretty much every statement in that text is false if viewed from a position of the opposing type of diabetes. I think 15-16yo teenagers are capable of understanding the differences. That is so simplified it’s not worth teaching. I’m sure you’ll set the record straight @Mel dCP

Actually it probably isn’t too far short of what most GPs are seemingly taught about diabetes
 
A few of them know about my cyborg status and are fascinated with the tech I wear - mainly because I had to explain to them why I’d got my phone out in class after telling them not to! I use it to calculate and log my insulin doses, scan my Libre sensor and Bluetooth my levels/IOB/COB to my watch. They use theirs to fart about on Instagram. So we’ve touched on diabetes - in that type one isn’t caused by my being fat or eating too much sugar. The subject came up when I was teaching in another school - the cover work I was given was all about how important carbs were as part of a healthy diet...
 
@Mel dCP

I hope this isn’t regarded as going too far off topic.

At my daughters school they seem to be into having biscuit days and cake days. During Valentines week they had Valentine biscuits available for the kids to buy at 50p a pop. All funds go to the school coffers.

Cake days pop up with regularity, following a similar formula, but parents are invited along too. I went to one before Christmas and queued up behind a number of parents and kids in the school yard after school, eventually buying several slabs of carrot cake. I said to the teacher manning the stall that it was a good job I wasn’t diabetic and she laughed at the irony.

Do you come across many kids with the condition, either T1 or T2?
 
Might be worth contacting the publishers too at some point if this is a new text! I wonder how many legs a glucose table has.
 
Interesting that dietary restriction is the first method of control.

Which would be downright dangerous for a type 1, another reason why they should be clear at how the types differ as does the treatment. All type 1s require insulin (outside of honeymooning and lada etc) and many type 2s also need insulin but others don't. To lump it all together in the initial description and then to quote diet as a first method of control for all is ludicrous.
 
Remember most of the time is spend on how the body should work, and what the different bits do when all the systems are working.
 
Which would be downright dangerous for a type 1
I must respectfully disagree. I think dietary awareness and control - of some form or another - is vital for good glycaemic control in Type 1. The extent of dietary restriction/control will vary from one individual to the next, of course, but at this point in my diabetes journey, I feel somewhat disillusioned by the notion that pumping and carb counting can allow Type 1's to eat 'normally'. (Whatever 'normal' means!)
 
Most schools have one or two T1s, in my experience. There’s usually a T2 or three on the staff. And yeah, EVERYTHING revolves around cake at the moment
 
Most schools have one or two T1s, in my experience. There’s usually a T2 or three on the staff. And yeah, EVERYTHING revolves around cake at the moment
They sent me a text today saying that Fairtrade sweets, chocolates and biscuits would be on sale tomorrow.
 
They sent me a text today saying that Fairtrade sweets, chocolates and biscuits would be on sale tomorrow.
You should see the trays of ***** for sharing in most staff rooms, it’s astonishing how badly many teachers seem to eat!

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You should see the trays of **** for sharing in most staff rooms, it’s astonishing how badly many teachers seem to eat!
Well ironically I take my daughters teachers in some cakes at the end of the autumn and summer term. Rather nice ones. Just in the way of appreciation as I know they work hard.

The woman who makes them is a part time supply teacher who runs a cake making business in her spare time.

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That piece of paper looks like an instruction manual for getting type 2 diabetes.
I agree. It’s funny but not funny. I feel something should be said which would mean tackling the head, head on.
 
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