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	<title>Comments for Type 1 diabetes</title>
	<link>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com</link>
	<description>for anyone who has been touched by this disease</description>
	<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2008 09:56:31 +0000</pubDate>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=2.2.1</generator>

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		<title>Comment on Charting, logging etc. by collier500</title>
		<link>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/25/charting-logging-etc/#comment-4368</link>
		<author>collier500</author>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Aug 2007 21:56:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/25/charting-logging-etc/#comment-4368</guid>
		<description>I also keep my chart on the frig so it is readable by the whole family. I mark when her pump was changed too.

Hugs, Rhonda</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I also keep my chart on the frig so it is readable by the whole family. I mark when her pump was changed too.</p>
<p>Hugs, Rhonda</p>
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		<title>Comment on Charting, logging etc. by collier500</title>
		<link>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/25/charting-logging-etc/#comment-4367</link>
		<author>collier500</author>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Aug 2007 03:47:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/25/charting-logging-etc/#comment-4367</guid>
		<description>our doctor gave us a great paper with a place for her BS number, her carbs, how much insulin was given and why she was high or low.

Send me your address and I'll mail you one.

It is a week at a glance and it is great for spotting trends.

Thanks for caring and sharing,
Hugs, Rhonda
Mom to Sydney, 8
type 1 since April 7, 2003
pump start march 2, 2005</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>our doctor gave us a great paper with a place for her BS number, her carbs, how much insulin was given and why she was high or low.</p>
<p>Send me your address and I&#8217;ll mail you one.</p>
<p>It is a week at a glance and it is great for spotting trends.</p>
<p>Thanks for caring and sharing,<br />
Hugs, Rhonda<br />
Mom to Sydney, 8<br />
type 1 since April 7, 2003<br />
pump start march 2, 2005</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Comment on Charting, logging etc. by Tom Kacy</title>
		<link>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/25/charting-logging-etc/#comment-4366</link>
		<author>Tom Kacy</author>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Aug 2007 19:29:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/25/charting-logging-etc/#comment-4366</guid>
		<description>I love my UltraSmart! When I first got it I would try to input everything
 for every meal. Now I only enter the carb data and my pump bolus
 amount. I like that if you had a high reading, you can indicate if you
 tested for ketones. You can save your A1c results, cholesterol test
 results, blood pressure and more. I do always forget about all those
 things so mostly I just enter the carbs/insulin. It's really an amazing
 little machine. Other than the first meter I bought when I was diagnosed
 in 1987, the UltraSmart is the only one I paid money for. I got all but
 $10 of it back through the rebate/trade-in but I still had to put up the
 money first. I had gotten a Profile, a FasTake and an Ultra all free
 directly from Lifescan. I also have 3 free BD meters and about 8 years ago
 I had another free meter, but I don't remember what company it was from.
 As much as I love the meter, I also love downloading it to my computer and
 printing out the reports for the CDE.
 --
 &lt;!--more--&gt;
 Liz</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I love my UltraSmart! When I first got it I would try to input everything<br />
 for every meal. Now I only enter the carb data and my pump bolus<br />
 amount. I like that if you had a high reading, you can indicate if you<br />
 tested for ketones. You can save your A1c results, cholesterol test<br />
 results, blood pressure and more. I do always forget about all those<br />
 things so mostly I just enter the carbs/insulin. It&#8217;s really an amazing<br />
 little machine. Other than the first meter I bought when I was diagnosed<br />
 in 1987, the UltraSmart is the only one I paid money for. I got all but<br />
 $10 of it back through the rebate/trade-in but I still had to put up the<br />
 money first. I had gotten a Profile, a FasTake and an Ultra all free<br />
 directly from Lifescan. I also have 3 free BD meters and about 8 years ago<br />
 I had another free meter, but I don&#8217;t remember what company it was from.<br />
 As much as I love the meter, I also love downloading it to my computer and<br />
 printing out the reports for the CDE.<br />
 &#8211;<br />
 <!--more--><br />
 Liz</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Comment on transplant by Tom Kacy</title>
		<link>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/23/transplant/#comment-4365</link>
		<author>Tom Kacy</author>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Aug 2007 01:19:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/23/transplant/#comment-4365</guid>
		<description>Howard,
Do you still take an antibiotic every day? I'd be worried about my body
becoming resistant to it. I often worry about irrational things, and
becoming immune to the effects of antibiotics is one of them. I always try
to find soaps that do NOT say they're antibacterial. Same for hand wipes
or any other cleaning supplies. In the past 10 years I think I've taken an
antibiotic only once. Maybe twice. Whenever my sister's kids have even a
sniffle she's on the phone to the doctor wanting a prescription for an
antibiotic. Same for herself. She'll stockpile them and then take them
later without seeing a doctor.
--
Liz</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Howard,<br />
Do you still take an antibiotic every day? I&#8217;d be worried about my body<br />
becoming resistant to it. I often worry about irrational things, and<br />
becoming immune to the effects of antibiotics is one of them. I always try<br />
to find soaps that do NOT say they&#8217;re antibacterial. Same for hand wipes<br />
or any other cleaning supplies. In the past 10 years I think I&#8217;ve taken an<br />
antibiotic only once. Maybe twice. Whenever my sister&#8217;s kids have even a<br />
sniffle she&#8217;s on the phone to the doctor wanting a prescription for an<br />
antibiotic. Same for herself. She&#8217;ll stockpile them and then take them<br />
later without seeing a doctor.<br />
&#8211;<br />
Liz</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Comment on transplant by Tom Kacy</title>
		<link>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/23/transplant/#comment-4364</link>
		<author>Tom Kacy</author>
		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Aug 2007 07:10:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/23/transplant/#comment-4364</guid>
		<description>Lisa,
 I've been diabetic for 18 years, and my first 11 were out of control. 7
 years ago I had an appointment with an endo (who turned out to be a thyroid
 specialist, so it wasn't a very productive appointment) and he said that I
 was in very good condition for someone who basically ignored the condition
 for 11 years. I'm glad that I got lucky, and that I'm still able to walk
 and see and don't live with constant pain every day. I'd really like to
 keep it that way. I live alone, and while I've thought about what would
 happen if I lost my sight or lost a foot/leg and how I might lose my
 independence, it wasn't as scary as the thought of having to go for
 dialysis three times a week. I'm always amazed at the people who do it. I
 think I would just freak out and not be able to go. I really hope that you
 don't have to wait another three years before getting a donor kidney. I
 guess getting a pancreas too would be ideal. Even though my pancreas
 doesn't work, taking insulin isn't a big deal and I can basically continue
 &lt;!--more--&gt;
 life as before. If your kidneys fail, you can't just do a quick fix
 yourself and then be off.
 --
 Liz</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Lisa,<br />
 I&#8217;ve been diabetic for 18 years, and my first 11 were out of control. 7<br />
 years ago I had an appointment with an endo (who turned out to be a thyroid<br />
 specialist, so it wasn&#8217;t a very productive appointment) and he said that I<br />
 was in very good condition for someone who basically ignored the condition<br />
 for 11 years. I&#8217;m glad that I got lucky, and that I&#8217;m still able to walk<br />
 and see and don&#8217;t live with constant pain every day. I&#8217;d really like to<br />
 keep it that way. I live alone, and while I&#8217;ve thought about what would<br />
 happen if I lost my sight or lost a foot/leg and how I might lose my<br />
 independence, it wasn&#8217;t as scary as the thought of having to go for<br />
 dialysis three times a week. I&#8217;m always amazed at the people who do it. I<br />
 think I would just freak out and not be able to go. I really hope that you<br />
 don&#8217;t have to wait another three years before getting a donor kidney. I<br />
 guess getting a pancreas too would be ideal. Even though my pancreas<br />
 doesn&#8217;t work, taking insulin isn&#8217;t a big deal and I can basically continue<br />
 <!--more--><br />
 life as before. If your kidneys fail, you can&#8217;t just do a quick fix<br />
 yourself and then be off.<br />
 &#8211;<br />
 Liz</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Comment on 100 points, 50 points, you pick the number??? by Tom Kacy</title>
		<link>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/17/100-points-50-points-you-pick-the-number/#comment-4363</link>
		<author>Tom Kacy</author>
		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Aug 2007 13:00:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/17/100-points-50-points-you-pick-the-number/#comment-4363</guid>
		<description>You have to be careful with things that say "sugar free", "low carb", "net
 carb" etc. They pretty much all contain sugar alcohols (sorbitol, mannitol
 etc) and companies like Atkins make it sound like they're not carbs and
 they won't do anything to your blood sugar. Again, this is definitely a
 personal issue. T^hose things most definitely do make my BG shoot up. The
 low carb people say that the sugar alcohols are metabolized so slowly that
 you won't notice any significant rise in blood sugar, but for me I might as
 well just be eating real sugar. I bet those shakes you had were full of
 sugar alcohols and it wasn't just the protein that spiked you. With
 protein, it usually takes several hours before I finally see the rise in my
 numbers. With "sugar free" foods, it happens quickly. I've used sugar
 free/fat free ice cream to treat lows in the past. I know that ice cream
 still has some natural sugar (lactose, from milk) in it but the amount I
 ate to bring myself back up wasn't enough to say that it was only lactose
 raising my BG. It was definitely all the other sweeteners in it.
 &lt;!--more--&gt;
 Whenever I see a package of any food that says something like "Only 4 grams
 net carbs!" I look at the total carbs, and go by that. I tried a couple of
 "2 net carbs" chocolate bars this summer that shot me up. The total carb
 count was 19, and I used that when calculating my insulin and it worked
 fine. If I counted it as only 2 grams of carb, I'd end up high 2 hours later.
 --
 Liz</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You have to be careful with things that say &#8220;sugar free&#8221;, &#8220;low carb&#8221;, &#8220;net<br />
 carb&#8221; etc. They pretty much all contain sugar alcohols (sorbitol, mannitol<br />
 etc) and companies like Atkins make it sound like they&#8217;re not carbs and<br />
 they won&#8217;t do anything to your blood sugar. Again, this is definitely a<br />
 personal issue. T^hose things most definitely do make my BG shoot up. The<br />
 low carb people say that the sugar alcohols are metabolized so slowly that<br />
 you won&#8217;t notice any significant rise in blood sugar, but for me I might as<br />
 well just be eating real sugar. I bet those shakes you had were full of<br />
 sugar alcohols and it wasn&#8217;t just the protein that spiked you. With<br />
 protein, it usually takes several hours before I finally see the rise in my<br />
 numbers. With &#8220;sugar free&#8221; foods, it happens quickly. I&#8217;ve used sugar<br />
 free/fat free ice cream to treat lows in the past. I know that ice cream<br />
 still has some natural sugar (lactose, from milk) in it but the amount I<br />
 ate to bring myself back up wasn&#8217;t enough to say that it was only lactose<br />
 raising my BG. It was definitely all the other sweeteners in it.<br />
 <!--more--><br />
 Whenever I see a package of any food that says something like &#8220;Only 4 grams<br />
 net carbs!&#8221; I look at the total carbs, and go by that. I tried a couple of<br />
 &#8220;2 net carbs&#8221; chocolate bars this summer that shot me up. The total carb<br />
 count was 19, and I used that when calculating my insulin and it worked<br />
 fine. If I counted it as only 2 grams of carb, I&#8217;d end up high 2 hours later.<br />
 &#8211;<br />
 Liz</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Comment on transplant by Tom Kacy</title>
		<link>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/23/transplant/#comment-4362</link>
		<author>Tom Kacy</author>
		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Aug 2007 06:31:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/23/transplant/#comment-4362</guid>
		<description>Lisa,
I'm sorry that you've had to wait so long. Have you been on dialysis for 4
years, or just a transplant list? Honestly, my biggest fear about
complications is having to go on dialysis. So far I'm pretty much
complication free after 18 years but I have had nightmares about my kidneys
failing. I also hope your friend's new organs work for her, and that
you'll get a call for your own soon.
--
Liz</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Lisa,<br />
I&#8217;m sorry that you&#8217;ve had to wait so long. Have you been on dialysis for 4<br />
years, or just a transplant list? Honestly, my biggest fear about<br />
complications is having to go on dialysis. So far I&#8217;m pretty much<br />
complication free after 18 years but I have had nightmares about my kidneys<br />
failing. I also hope your friend&#8217;s new organs work for her, and that<br />
you&#8217;ll get a call for your own soon.<br />
&#8211;<br />
Liz</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Comment on 100 points, 50 points, you pick the number??? by Tom Kacy</title>
		<link>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/17/100-points-50-points-you-pick-the-number/#comment-4361</link>
		<author>Tom Kacy</author>
		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Aug 2007 12:22:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/17/100-points-50-points-you-pick-the-number/#comment-4361</guid>
		<description>When I first heard about Dr. Bernstein's book (the first one) I went out
 and bought a copy. While he does have some good advice, I knew that I
 could never follow his plan. It is extremely rigid and I can't see how a
 Type I could follow it and live a normal life. I know that he is a Type I
 himself, but he has the luxury of living a monotonous life where every day
 is the same. Most people can't do that. His advice seems better suited
 for a Type 2. I even tried, for a short time, to pretty much cut out all
 carbs. The first day it went great. The next morning I woke up with
 incredibly high BG. My body just doesn't do well with large amounts of
 protein. It seems to convert it to glucose as if I was eating a loaf of
 white bread. I know that up to 20% (I think?) of preotein can be converted
 to glucose but for me it seemed like 90%. Unlike regular carb-filled
 food, the protein could take hours to kick in so I'd be fine for awhile and
 then my BG would shoot up. It usually happened during the night and I'd
 wake up with BGs in the 300-500 range. I stopped that experiment quickly.
 &lt;!--more--&gt;
 I'm happy that his plan works for some people. I just hate the low-carb
 people who tell me that I'm killing myself because I don't agree with them,
 and because I might eat 70 grams of carbs in one meal. Hell, even if I am
 killing myself at least I'm not miserable each &#38; every day!
 --
 Liz</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When I first heard about Dr. Bernstein&#8217;s book (the first one) I went out<br />
 and bought a copy. While he does have some good advice, I knew that I<br />
 could never follow his plan. It is extremely rigid and I can&#8217;t see how a<br />
 Type I could follow it and live a normal life. I know that he is a Type I<br />
 himself, but he has the luxury of living a monotonous life where every day<br />
 is the same. Most people can&#8217;t do that. His advice seems better suited<br />
 for a Type 2. I even tried, for a short time, to pretty much cut out all<br />
 carbs. The first day it went great. The next morning I woke up with<br />
 incredibly high BG. My body just doesn&#8217;t do well with large amounts of<br />
 protein. It seems to convert it to glucose as if I was eating a loaf of<br />
 white bread. I know that up to 20% (I think?) of preotein can be converted<br />
 to glucose but for me it seemed like 90%. Unlike regular carb-filled<br />
 food, the protein could take hours to kick in so I&#8217;d be fine for awhile and<br />
 then my BG would shoot up. It usually happened during the night and I&#8217;d<br />
 wake up with BGs in the 300-500 range. I stopped that experiment quickly.<br />
 <!--more--><br />
 I&#8217;m happy that his plan works for some people. I just hate the low-carb<br />
 people who tell me that I&#8217;m killing myself because I don&#8217;t agree with them,<br />
 and because I might eat 70 grams of carbs in one meal. Hell, even if I am<br />
 killing myself at least I&#8217;m not miserable each &amp; every day!<br />
 &#8211;<br />
 Liz</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
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		<title>Comment on 100 points, 50 points, you pick the number??? by Tom Kacy</title>
		<link>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/17/100-points-50-points-you-pick-the-number/#comment-4360</link>
		<author>Tom Kacy</author>
		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Aug 2007 00:02:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/17/100-points-50-points-you-pick-the-number/#comment-4360</guid>
		<description>One more thing...
I assume that you keep a log book of some sort, either on paper or
computer. If not, you should. It may seem like a pain but it's probably
the best diagnostic tool you can have. Write down what you ate &#38; how
much. How much insulin you took, including what type &#38; at what
time. Activity. Indicate if your day was extra stressful, or if you sat
around in your underwear watching TV all day.
I have eaten the same meal for dinner on different nights. Started with
BGs in the same range, taken the same amount of insulin but 2-3 hours later
ended up with different results. I'd go back and check my log and see that
one night I did my laundry, which can really drive my BG down. Another
time I just sat on the couch watching DVDs for 3 hours.
--
Liz</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One more thing&#8230;<br />
I assume that you keep a log book of some sort, either on paper or<br />
computer. If not, you should. It may seem like a pain but it&#8217;s probably<br />
the best diagnostic tool you can have. Write down what you ate &amp; how<br />
much. How much insulin you took, including what type &amp; at what<br />
time. Activity. Indicate if your day was extra stressful, or if you sat<br />
around in your underwear watching TV all day.<br />
I have eaten the same meal for dinner on different nights. Started with<br />
BGs in the same range, taken the same amount of insulin but 2-3 hours later<br />
ended up with different results. I&#8217;d go back and check my log and see that<br />
one night I did my laundry, which can really drive my BG down. Another<br />
time I just sat on the couch watching DVDs for 3 hours.<br />
&#8211;<br />
Liz</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>Comment on 100 points, 50 points, you pick the number??? by Tom Kacy</title>
		<link>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/17/100-points-50-points-you-pick-the-number/#comment-4359</link>
		<author>Tom Kacy</author>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2007 05:53:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.type-1-diabetes.zolushka123.com/2007/08/17/100-points-50-points-you-pick-the-number/#comment-4359</guid>
		<description>The problem with doing things by the book is that one book doesn't work for
 everyone. This disease really is YMMV. If you've done everything the book
 suggests and it hasn't worked, it's time to throw out the book and write
 your own.
 If it's your post-prandial readings that are running too high but you're
 okay during the night or when you're not eating, then it's a problem with
 the pre-meal insulin. In the past I had used both Humalog &#38; Regular. I
 didn't mix them, but I would sometimes take two injections if I was eating
 fast food, or going to a concert and eating at the club where everything
 was deep fried. In some cases I would just use Regular, and forget the
 Humalog. Since it took longer to work and stayed in my body longer, it
 worked better for fat filled meals.
 For awhile, when I was on NPH, I was waking up with high morning readings
 no matter how I tweaked the dose. I would usually inject it right before
 bed, and for awhile I added an extra small shot of NPH with my
 &lt;!--more--&gt;
 dinner. That seemed to work for awhile but then things went funny
 again. Then I started drinking beer (mmmmm...... Guinness) with dinner
 each night. Definitely more fun than taking an extra shot, but that also
 had limited success. I would change my doses constantly and sometimes it
 would work (for awhile) and other times I'd end up in trouble.
 I was not happy with my pump for the first 8 weeks or so that I had
 it. Now, I wouldn't give it up. I can really fine tune my basal rates,
 every hour if I need to. If I see that I'm always going high starting at
 5-6pm, I can up my dose then without having to increase it for the entire
 day, or half day. If I'm borderline high, at the upper end of my personal
 goal, I can take a very small amount of insulin to stop the climb without
 worrying about going low. I know that a pump isn't for everyone, and not
 everyone can afford it even with insurance. For me, it has made a world of
 difference. For years now I had "good" A1c results, usually in the 5's,
 but it wasn't from good control. It was from highs being cancelled out by
 lows. My last A1c, first since I started pumping, was 5.6. I still had a
 bunch of highs &#38; lows, especially during the first 2 months, but they
 weren't as severe as they were on shots. I'm learning how &#38; when to change
 my settings better to keep myself out of trouble. If I did have to return
 to injections, I think I could do a much better job than before but I know
 I'd still run into problems.
 I doubt there's a single diabetic who has had consistent numbers throughout
 their life with the disease. Maybe Dr. Bernstein, but I wouldn't want his
 life!
 --
 Liz</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The problem with doing things by the book is that one book doesn&#8217;t work for<br />
 everyone. This disease really is YMMV. If you&#8217;ve done everything the book<br />
 suggests and it hasn&#8217;t worked, it&#8217;s time to throw out the book and write<br />
 your own.<br />
 If it&#8217;s your post-prandial readings that are running too high but you&#8217;re<br />
 okay during the night or when you&#8217;re not eating, then it&#8217;s a problem with<br />
 the pre-meal insulin. In the past I had used both Humalog &amp; Regular. I<br />
 didn&#8217;t mix them, but I would sometimes take two injections if I was eating<br />
 fast food, or going to a concert and eating at the club where everything<br />
 was deep fried. In some cases I would just use Regular, and forget the<br />
 Humalog. Since it took longer to work and stayed in my body longer, it<br />
 worked better for fat filled meals.<br />
 For awhile, when I was on NPH, I was waking up with high morning readings<br />
 no matter how I tweaked the dose. I would usually inject it right before<br />
 bed, and for awhile I added an extra small shot of NPH with my<br />
 <!--more--><br />
 dinner. That seemed to work for awhile but then things went funny<br />
 again. Then I started drinking beer (mmmmm&#8230;&#8230; Guinness) with dinner<br />
 each night. Definitely more fun than taking an extra shot, but that also<br />
 had limited success. I would change my doses constantly and sometimes it<br />
 would work (for awhile) and other times I&#8217;d end up in trouble.<br />
 I was not happy with my pump for the first 8 weeks or so that I had<br />
 it. Now, I wouldn&#8217;t give it up. I can really fine tune my basal rates,<br />
 every hour if I need to. If I see that I&#8217;m always going high starting at<br />
 5-6pm, I can up my dose then without having to increase it for the entire<br />
 day, or half day. If I&#8217;m borderline high, at the upper end of my personal<br />
 goal, I can take a very small amount of insulin to stop the climb without<br />
 worrying about going low. I know that a pump isn&#8217;t for everyone, and not<br />
 everyone can afford it even with insurance. For me, it has made a world of<br />
 difference. For years now I had &#8220;good&#8221; A1c results, usually in the 5&#8217;s,<br />
 but it wasn&#8217;t from good control. It was from highs being cancelled out by<br />
 lows. My last A1c, first since I started pumping, was 5.6. I still had a<br />
 bunch of highs &amp; lows, especially during the first 2 months, but they<br />
 weren&#8217;t as severe as they were on shots. I&#8217;m learning how &amp; when to change<br />
 my settings better to keep myself out of trouble. If I did have to return<br />
 to injections, I think I could do a much better job than before but I know<br />
 I&#8217;d still run into problems.<br />
 I doubt there&#8217;s a single diabetic who has had consistent numbers throughout<br />
 their life with the disease. Maybe Dr. Bernstein, but I wouldn&#8217;t want his<br />
 life!<br />
 &#8211;<br />
 Liz</p>
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