ExtremelyW0rried
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 333
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
If she wasn't diagnosed at the time of booking then your insurance will be valid. But are you saying you wouldn't want to go if she was T1?
We'd possibly like to book Disneyland Paris for next easter - booking early makes it a fair bit cheaper - and my husband doesn't want to go this year as he says my daughter is too young as only 2.
However it is likely that at some point - although I don't know exactly when - she is going to develop t1. It is strongly genetic in my family and she has had some high blood sugars here and there.
So we either book it and take out insurance and not tell the children so they aren't disappointed when we have to cancel or just leave it for now and accept we can't go.
If you knew you had a child that was likely to develop t1 what would you do?
You were diagnosed at 11 yrs old, what's to say your daughter won't be diagnosed at 11 yrs old as well?
That's 9 yrs of undiagnosed fun she could have, Disneyland included
Does insurance, which to all intents and purposes is down to money, more important than your daughters happiness?
Perhaps you could ask your husband to join the forum so we could hear his opinions on this subject, I'm assuming he is the father and should be allowed to have his input.
If I was a young kid and had just been told I'd need to spend the rest of my life jabbing things into me and checking numbers, I think a trip to Disneyland would be just the ticket to cheer me up no end and show me that life keeps going on and can be filled with fun things just like anyone else's.
Not wanting to dampen your enthusiasm or anything, but theme parks are tedious for t1s anywayOnce there have been abnormal blood sugars - and 8s and 9s ARE abnormal - it's usually less than two years to diagnosis. According to trial net anyway. When they pick up antibody positive people once they get abnormal OGTT then they usually develop frank diabetes in less than two years so I think it's unlikely to be another nine years, although of course I can't know for sure.
I would be very hesitant to take a t1 child abroad, particularly a very little one. Stuff that could go wrong is too long to list.
A two year old worrying about their numbers?Or it highlights that you ARENT like all the other kids who can eat what they want in this magical place and not worry about numbers.
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