First, my plan to start with the CGM yesterday didn’t go so well. I did not have stable blood sugars for more than an hour yesterday, so I knew it’s not good to start a new sensor when my sugars are fluctuating. So, we will have to try again today. I’ve had a few bad diabetes days in the last 2-3 days. My blood sugars haven’t been that bad, but also not that good. I have had 3 sites fall out, I don’t know why they aren’t sticking. I think it’s because my insertion device is not working properly. I have another device, but of course I have no idea where it’s at, why would I know.
Today is going to be a long day. I have a lot of work to get done, a lot of cleaning, a lot of laundry, and some ironing to do because I have an interview tomorrow. I’m nervous because it’s the same office that my roommate works at, so I need to make sure that I am on my best game so I don’t make him look like a donkey(chose this word instead of the other to keep it pg), for him referring me. Do you know how hard this is going to be? There is a 24 hour marathon of college basketball going on todayon ESPN which is going to make it hard for me to concentration. Plus, since this is the 3rd Tuesday that I have been unemployed, every Tuesday is a Law and Order: SVU marathon. I have been probably never blogged about this before, but this is my favorite show. Quick side note on SVU and how it became my favorite show. Back in my freshman year of college I had a huge paper that was due the next day, what a surprise and I was working on it for like 3 hours straight without a break. Then I decided to take a break and watch SVU for the first time, but I would mute the tv during commercials and do my paper for 5 minutes, then 5 minutes at the next commercial. I did this for about 4 episodes of SVU and not only got my paper down, but read 3 chapters of a text book. This than became the only way that I would do homework and reading, watch SVU or another show if it wasn’t on, mute the tv and then read. I found that my attention span was only about 5 minutes anyway, so it worked out best.
Wow, sorry about that side not there. I have seen a few people blogging about the Bayer Contour USB. I freaking want one! Can I call Nick Jonas to get one? My little nieces (actually my cousins, but my aunt is more like a sister to me, so I have called them my nieces for 10 years, but now that I have an actual niece, my brother’s daughter, I’m not sure if I can still do that), they watch the Jonas brothers so that’s a good enough connection to them I think. It looks so cool that you just test and then plug it right into the computer. I never upload my sugars to the computer, ever. I don’t have the USB cable for my Freestyle Lite, if I had one, I probably would. My doctor’s office has every single one of them at her’s so when I go she just uploads them.
[As I’m typing this sentence a brand new episode of SVU is starting, pause while I watch the opening minute of it]
How many people have used the USB Contour already? What are your thoughts, are there any bad ones of it yet?
Does anybody know how much it costs, or how much it is going to cost?
I was excited for a while to attend the
Manny was also very helpful in giving me some key insight about Cobra and certain people that I should speak to in order to get some better information about it. I told him that with not working at the diabetes company anymore, it felt weird to be at a conference as an attendee and not behind the booth working it, I actually liked it better.
ost important to me because I had heard so many different numbers and percentages. “What are the chances that a child of a type 1 will also have diabetes?” Well here is the breakdown. If the father has diabetes, then there is a 6% chance, if the mother has diabetes then 3% and then if both parents do, it is 15%. The reason that the 3% difference is there between men and women is due to unexpected abortions. The final question was asked about an artificial pancreas. Although an artificial pancreas can become a great tool in management, it is not a cure. There is one main reason why. In type 1 diabetics, when we eat the insulin that we then bolus with, or the artificial pancreas releases will never catch up to the food. Meaning that 2 hours after you eat, your blood sugar may look normal, but in between those 2 hours your blood sugar has spiked which is still causing high blood sugar numbers. In order to fix this, you must be able to anticipate the food that you are going to eat. With an insulin pump or MDI even, you can do this. You can count your carbs before eating and bolus, 10-15 even 20 minutes before the food touches your mouth. Which, when lunch time came at the conference, we didn’t know what was for lunch until it was right in front of our face so there were 4 diabetics at my table all wondering when and how much to bolus, not a good move on part of The Signature Grand.
were prepared for them about how the diabetes OC has helped them, why they started, and advice tips from them. A few quotes and answers that I really liked from each of them are listed below: