I'm always in favour of this for people I'm likely to spend time with. The more people who know about hypos the better. I've had my life saved by a work colleague who realised my blood sugar was low when I did not (I used to lose hypo awareness during pregnancy). When I'm alone at a public swimming pool I always tell the life guards where I've put my glucose and that I'm T1, just in case. (I've never yet had a problem in a pool, but hypos and water do not mix.)or become a diabetes educator.
I was recently diagnosed with t1d. Most people assume you can only get t1d at a young age, since I was diagnosed at 17 people assumed that I have type 2. My school nurse said to me "You can ween yourself off insulin... you are pre-type 2." While the other nurse insisted I get a bicycle to exercise. At this point I was literally strait out of ketoacidosis weighing only 99 pounds. I had to keep telling them that I was type 1! How do you explain t1d to people who just don't get it? : (
DSN; But only children and young people are diagnosed with type 1
It beggars belief and sometimes our lives are truly in their hands.
ps It has been changed back to Type 1.
And even doctors can get it wrong - Both ways!
Thanks so much for posting those references...it is a (little) reassuring to see the situations of misdiagnosis being recognized AND reported on.
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