Categorized under Diabetes

Metaglip (Glipizide, Metformin)

Metaglip (Glipizide, Metformin)


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Metaglip (Glipizide, Metformin)
DIABETES IN CHILDREN: PARENTAL WORRIES
What I have just said can apply to any teenager. It may seem much harder if you are a diabetic teenager. For a start you have to be a little more organized than your friends. You have to take your insulin injections once or twice a day and you have to eat meals at about the same time each day which have the right food content. You cannot just go out to a disco and dance the night away on two beers and some potato chips. Everyone with diabetes gets fed up about their disorder at times. ‘Why me? Why have I been singled out in this way? It is not fair.’ ‘Why should I take my insulin anyway? I’m not going to take it today – so there!’ But the only person you are fighting in the long run is yourself, and it is no fun waging war on your own body. So you get frustrated instead and get depressed, or get angry with your parents or friends. No one expects you to be perfect; there is no such person as a Perfect diabetic. It is natural to resent being diabetic at times, so do not feel guilty about it.
The parents of someone with diabetes can be a little more worried about their teenage son or daughter than other people’s parents. Their concern may come across as extra nagging. Have you had your insulin? Have you checked your blood glucose? You must be home for supper. Why were you late home last night? We were worried; we thought you might have had a hypoglycemic attack. In the early teenage years, your mother or father may still be giving you your insulin injections and taking most of the responsibility for looking after your diabetes. Some parents find it very difficult to realize that you are now old enough to take over this responsibility for yourself.
Jane is now twenty years old and has been diabetic for ten years. When she was nineteen she went on the local diabetic association holiday and was thoroughly enjoying herself. She telephoned her mother to tell her all about the holiday. During the conversation her mother asked her about her diabetic control.
Later that night I had a telephone call from her mother, who said, among other things,? Jane?s blood glucose is 10 mmol/l(180mg/dl). I?m sure you are doing something about that!’
A single reading of 10 mmol/1 is hardly a disaster, but the whole telephone conversation showed how over-anxious and over-protective Jane’s mother was. Jane was a sensible and intelligent young woman and would have been mortified to learn that her mother had telephoned me. A year later, Jane succeeded in leaving home and now has a demanding and exciting job. She continues to look after her own diabetes efficiently.
*46/102/5*

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