Paediatric sites often suggest using toes on young children but most other places say that adults shouldn't use toes.How about switching to your toes to take your blood once in a while? Do people do this to prevent callus build-up? Does it work?
I thought for a moment you said "Podiatric sites"Paediatric sites often suggest using toes on young children
However, logic doesn't always apply and there is the infinitesimally small chance that you fix it by sheer unadulterated randomness. Which comes not from logic... Of course that doesn't necessarily make it a repeatable solution! Which is of course, necessarily logical...( But actually it is, at a theoretical, mathematical level, unsolveable. N equations with >N+1 unknowns = not solveable. We can see that from algebra, from logic. )
I want to like this a thousand times because it's so bloody tragically true, but you managed to make me laugh about it. And it came at just the right time. I was about to make a whole set of potentially stupid changesOk here's one more, the "Rule of 1".
There is an unfortunate corollary to this:
- Never deliberately change more than one thing at the same time, or the results won't make any sense and you won't have actually learned anything about how to improve your control. "The same time" means at least 3 days and probably more like a week.
- If more than one thing changes at the same time, for reasons outside your control (illness, stress, temperature, insulin quality, infusion set, pump, needle, injection site, time of the month, phase of the moon, yada yada), then you are never going to figure out what caused the problem and you are never going to be able to fix it... :-(
[Edited to add:]
"Tim2000s' Rider":
... except by pure random chance and blind luck.![]()
Yes so true. Diabetic care is so intricate. So many pieces involved. It's gotta be solved peice by peice. Pearls of wisdom SpikerOk here's one more, the "Rule of 1".
There is an unfortunate corollary to this:
- Never deliberately change more than one thing at the same time, or the results won't make any sense and you won't have actually learned anything about how to improve your control. "The same time" means at least 3 days and probably more like a week.
- If more than one thing changes at the same time, for reasons outside your control (illness, stress, temperature, insulin quality, infusion set, pump, needle, injection site, time of the month, phase of the moon, yada yada), then you are never going to figure out what caused the problem and you are never going to be able to fix it... :-(
[Edited to add:]
"Tim2000s' Rider":
... except by pure random chance and blind luck.![]()