Hi. I’m new to the site although not newly diagnosed. Well in a way I am. Let me explain a bit first. I was diagnosed as type 2 on the 10/03/2010. My sugar levels since then had always been high - in the 20s to 30s or higher - despite my Dr putting me on Metformin, Victoza and Dapagilflozin. In June this year I was struggling with my breathing so mum took me to A&E.
She dropped me off at 11 am Saturday. By 11.45 I still hadn’t been seen so asked when it will be my turn and said oh btw I’m diabetic. Within minutes the triage nurse was out, took one look at me and I was on a bed in resus for the next 5 hours hooked up to drips, before being transferred to Acute Care overnight and then on to a ward.
Turns out I was having a bad DKA episode - which I had warned my Dr years before that the dapagliflozin could cause and she said I wasn’t at risk, despite having all the symptoms for years as well!
The hospital retested everything while I was there and found out I was actually type 1 after all! So I’d been misdiagnosed all those years ago.
Anyway to get to the point, since then my sugar levels are well under control to the point where I now hypo occasionally. I am sensitive to my levels dropping so well aware and can act quickly.
Today I had a hypo at work. First in a while. I told my supervisor my sugar levels were dropping so need to react. She was understanding and said would get the phone if it rang. Which it did but no response from her so I ended up answering it. It rang again while I was testing my bloods so I left it. No one answered it! It rang again and only after 3 rings did my colleague pick it up.
What would you have done in that situation. Should I have removed myself from the room and my desk until my levels are normal again? Ive always just carried on, but after today it has left me wondering. I shouldn’t have to announce I’m testing my bloods can someone get that as we should all be answering the phone anyway. The fact that I’m usually the one who does as no one else does - should that matter? Given the fact my supervisor said she’d answer the phone already as well.
Sorry needed to rant a bit as it really annoyed me today. So apologies too for the long post.
Thank you in advance
no you need to be around people. what do you think caused it bad eating or over use of insulin.
hi there @MissMJ73
perhaps it would be a good idea to talk to your DSN ( diabetic nurse ) and ask about going on a carb counting course.
( they are usually called DAFNE courses )
while you are waiting you could have a look at this online course https://www.bertieonline.org.uk/
I would have ignored the phone by the way -- treating a hypo is the most important thing.
that's great you have the course for january -- that will help a lot.I’m booked on a course for January and looking forward to it. It’s a huge mind change for me going from T2 to T1.
Thanks will have a look.
Accidentally catch your elbow on the phone so it is off the hook. Have used this a few times in the past when expected to work at lunchtime. Worked a treat!
that's great you have the course for january -- that will help a lot.
this is a great place for support -- I forgot to say welcome to the forum in my last post !!
so a very warm welcome from me !!
Testing quite often does not solve the problem. All we just have to do is keep track of time and the symptoms and rest will fall in place. Good luck!!!!Thanks. I’m on Abasaglar as my long acting and Novarapid as the fast. I’m still trying to learn how to balance the Novarapid with my carb intake as only been on insulin since June. I think yesterday time got away with me and I didn’t eat much at lunch and didn’t snack in between like I normally do either. My sugars were high at lunch so maybe I over compensated and didn’t realise how quick they would drop from what I ate if that make sense or I didn’t factor in eating little. Will wee how it goes.
Thank you again.
When you're first on insulin it's a bit unpredictable. Do you know if you're still producing any of your own insulin, because that adds to the unpredictability! If you're having a hypo then first and foremost treat the hypo otherwise you could end up sounding drunk on the phone line anyway.
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