I wonder if she has made a connection between food and being sick when she was poorly in hospital with initial diagnosis. Who wants to eat food if they think they will be sick? My son was an extremely fussy eater. I used to serve a plate of food (what we would normally eat - nothing special) and if he didn't eat it inside 25 mins then it would be taken away (this was after discussion with the dietician). Another thing I would do would be to say he was allowed to leave half of what was on his plate (so he would eat the other half). It is very worrying for any parent, but when your child is diabetic and prone to hypo's it is terrifying. We would give his insulin after the meal so we could adjust it for what he ate. The final thing that got him to eat was one night when he hadn't eaten he had a severe hypo which caused convulsions. When we got his sugars up he said he'd seen a monster with green eyes. We identified that as the "hungry monster". From that point on, whenever he didn't eat, he would be reminded that the hungry monster would come. That was even adopted by his peers at nursery school - they would all tell him too! I have never given him anything special to eat that would normally be considered a treat just to get him to eat, because I never wanted him to use his blood sugars to manipulate us into giving him junk food. My son - after a good few years of worry can now eat as much if not more than me! My daughter - not diabetic - turned out to be an even fussier eater! She refused her meals all the time, so I stopped giving her a plate! Instead I would give myself more food and found that she would then eat from my plate, because she could not bear for me to have something she didn't have herself! I do think however the hospital situation may be where it stemmed from for your daughter and you should seek advice from her dietician.