NICE recommends a minimum of 4 times per day and to get a good level of management, 8-10 times per day.Good points made. My problem is how often should I do a blood test and at what times?
Well, I will add mine. I'm husband of T1 "girl" (59 and T1 for 20 years). When I married her 5 years ago and brought her to Australia (I new she is T1, but I liked her, and sadly enough, we both became widower and widow couple years earlier), I got her to all diabetes helpers around. That's when I came across carbo counting lessons, conducted by young girl, in local hospital, in the room looking like a corner store. She was teaching my wife principles of carbo counting, reading labels from empty food boxes and do some maths, and I had to be present to do translations (my second wife came from Poland and has poor grasp of English). That's made me laugh, and I promptly wrote for her program, so she can do it on her laptop, with self-created database of foods she buys or makes. She's been using it for almost 3 years. Then came idea to make phone app. Makes it easier if you eat out. Now she is using her application on the phone, she does it religiously. Thanks to carbo counting her HbA1C dropped from 12.5 to 8.6 within one year.I thought I'd start a topic with some useful links and tools for T1Ds, including links to methods and courses.
For Basal Testing, this is possibly the best description and detailed breakdown I've found for both pump and MDI users: https://mysugr.com/basal-rate-testing/
To learn about Carb counting and Insulin to Carb ratios, the Bournemouth Diabetes and Endocrine Centre has the following e-learning course: http://www.bertieonline.org.uk/
In terms of general management of Diabetes, the following are all extremely useful:
Gary Scheiner's website (Author of Think like a Pancreas): http://integrateddiabetes.com/
Richard Bernstein's website: http://www.diabetes-book.com/
Sugar Surfing from Stephen Ponder: Website - http://sugarsurfing.com/ and Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/StephenPonderMD/
Helpful, downloadable and printable sick day flowchart: http://www.leicestershirediabetes.org.uk/uploads//documents/Type1 Sick_day_rules_InsulinV3.pdf
Diabetes-Support forum: http://www.diabetes-support.org.uk/info/
The DOC and NHS team T1 Resources Website: http://www.t1resources.uk/
Please feel free to add any that you can think of.
I forgot to tell everybody that my calculator has build-in 4mth time limit. Each update extends this time for another 4 mths. When I perfect the program, I would like to sell it for couple bucks. So if your calculator stopped working, just update it, you won't loose anything of your data.Well, I will add mine. I'm husband of T1 "girl" (59 and T1 for 20 years). When I married her 5 years ago and brought her to Australia (I new she is T1, but I liked her, and sadly enough, we both became widower and widow couple years earlier), I got her to all diabetes helpers around. That's when I came across carbo counting lessons, conducted by young girl, in local hospital, in the room looking like a corner store. She was teaching my wife principles of carbo counting, reading labels from empty food boxes and do some maths, and I had to be present to do translations (my second wife came from Poland and has poor grasp of English). That's made me laugh, and I promptly wrote for her program, so she can do it on her laptop, with self-created database of foods she buys or makes. She's been using it for almost 3 years. Then came idea to make phone app. Makes it easier if you eat out. Now she is using her application on the phone, she does it religiously. Thanks to carbo counting her HbA1C dropped from 12.5 to 8.6 within one year.
I use www.exactmeals.com and it's excellent for carb counting.
From Quality Management - ‘measure then improve’.To paraphrase Paul Weller, the more I test the more I know, the more I know the less I understand............
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