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by templaedhel
3300 days ago
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As a type 1 diabetic I can say (personally) the difficulties of managing my diabetes do not stem from taking insulin, that's a solved problem. Rather the difficulties come from taking the right amount at the right time. Insulin is slow acting (2-3 hours for it to fully take effect) so you're always trying to predict/aim for a moving target, and one that can shift rapidly depending on eating/exercise. If I could just set it and forget it, or even just have the ability to be 50% less accurate when calculating/planning dosage and activities, it would be a paradigm shift. |
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My father's doctor mis-prescribed his insulin levels a few years back. His doctor forgot about the potential interaction with another drug, which is a very common problem unfortunately in medicine.
The end result is that I got a call from my father who sounded as if he was experiencing a stroke, as his entire right side of his body was unresponsive and his speech was slurred and he sounded incredibly drunk. I rushed over and found him slumped in his living room unable to move and I carried him to my car for a hurried car-ride to the hospital.
He got to spend that night -Christmas Eve- in the hospital for observation until they were able to determine he was ok and that the culprit was the drug-interaction. Something like $10k of his retirement fund gone because he had been laid-off and his insurance wouldn't cover this sort of thing.