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CHILDREN? DIABETES: HANDING OVER RESPONSIBILITY. ENJOYING LIFE
Handing over responsibility
Parental concern is natural and it is very difficult and worrying to give up running your child’s diabetes. There is the constant fear of hypoglycemia and the unspoken dread of your child being found unconscious or ill in the street. The teenage years with their rebellions and new activities must seem to many parents the worst possible time to hand over the care of the diabetes to the teenager. But most doctors believe that the diabetic child should start learning to look after his or her own diabetes as soon as possible. Very small children can give their own insulin injections and by the time they have reached their teens all diabetics should be injecting themselves. Similarly, all diabetic children should learn to measure their own blood glucose level as soon as possible and should gradually start to make their own decisions about adjusting their insulin dose according to the results. If the handover process from parent to child is gradual it is easier on both sides; you should not forget that your child may be as frightened of taking over responsibility as you are of relinquishing it. During this time your child must learn the rules.
Steve became diabetic when he was eleven years old and was allowed to eat what he wanted as long as he ate enough to stop him from becoming hypoglycemic. When he started going to an adult diabetic clinic in another city he was appalled to discover that his blood glucose control was poor and that he had been eating the wrong foods for years. He deeply regrets not having been encouraged to eat a sensible diet from the time his diabetes was diagnosed as it is very hard to change now. He feels let down and angry.
Enjoying life
How can a diabetic teenage enjoy life without the diabetes getting in the way? Your ticket to trouble-free fun is a little common sense and forward planning. First, make sure you are so practiced at checking your blood glucose level that you can do it quickly and efficiently anywhere. Get all your blood testing kit into an easily portable form that will fit into a pocket or bag. If you can keep an eye on your blood glucose level you can allow yourself more flexibility over insulin injections and meal times.
*47/102/5*

