Hopeful34
Well-Known Member
Sorry, I should have said that that vaccinations still affect my blood sugar.Wow, wish I'd known this on Saturday! Thanks, will pass on to friends and make a note to self for next year!
Sorry, I should have said that that vaccinations still affect my blood sugar.Wow, wish I'd known this on Saturday! Thanks, will pass on to friends and make a note to self for next year!
It never fails to amaze me how different we all are - in our reactions to vaccines, the same food, the effect of stress etc etc. Whoever coined the phrase 'the only type of diabetes you have is yours' got that right!Flu vaccination went well. Drank plenty of water throughout the day and would hardly know I’d had it. However, I have spent the night chomping on Jelly Babies and am still low this morning. No three am surge and no foot on the floor rocket. Actually ate breakfast before insulin. Unheard of. So I expect the vaccination dropped my levels. Which I have to say is not the usual way around for me. But I am never low in the mornings.
Dentist this morning. That will up things I’m sure.
I am annoyed for you!!!For some reason it is bugging me, lately my doctors are using the term for my endo as the person who manages my diabetes. No one manages my diabetes but me lol, she just write the prescriptions I need and orders bloodwork. She herself has said she would never tell a person with 96% TIR what to do. I realize some people do need "managed" and they also need a term to refer to the person that looks at my bloodwork and I guess overseeing what care I might ever need, but they used to say your endo. There is not a good reason why this is annoying me. But it sort of feels like the care I take to have such good control is because of an endo's management? I do not like the new verbage!
I'll get over it I'm sure... or not lol, but more than one doctor has used it, so they have decided it's the term now to use!