• Summer's diabetes

    From MartinS@21:1/5 to All on Sun Aug 1 19:10:11 2021
    In the recent episode where Todd (boo, hiss!) finds Summer passed out
    because she has skipped her insulin shots and has been drinking sweet
    cider, he says "She was having a hypo."

    If she had an excess of blood sugar, that would be a HYPERglycemic
    event. Coversely, a HYPO is a result of taking too much insulin, or not consuming enough calories after an insulin dose. Although both are
    serious conditions, hypoglycemia is more life-threatening than
    hyperglycemia in the short term. If you encounter someone who you know
    is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency
    assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened
    drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to
    administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    I assume Summer has type 1 diabetes, which usually develops in childhood
    or adolescence, in which the body produces no insulin of its own. With
    type 2, which I have, the body's natural insulin level is low, but it
    can be managed with synthetic insulin, as well as other medications,
    diet and exercise.

    This plot has echoes of teenager Katy Harris, who also had type 1
    diabetes. She arrived with her family under a witness protection
    programme in 2002. In 2005, after accidentally killing her father Tommy,
    she committed suicide by drinking sugared water. It might have been
    quicker if she had overdosed on insulin!

    Incidentally, Thomas Craig, who played Tommy Harris, is well known in
    Canada as a police inspector on Murdoch Mysteries, set in 1890s Toronto,
    which has been running on CBC since 2008. And Richard Fleesman, who
    played Katy's brother Craig Harris, went on to be a successful actor,
    musician and singer-sonwriter. Richard's father David, sister Emily and
    mother Sue Jenkins have all appeared on Corrie.

    --
    Martin S

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  • From kat@21:1/5 to MartinS on Mon Aug 2 09:32:47 2021
    On 02/08/2021 00:10, MartinS wrote:
    In the recent episode where Todd (boo, hiss!) finds Summer passed out
    because she has skipped her insulin shots and has been drinking sweet
    cider, he says "She was having a hypo."

    If she had an excess of blood sugar, that would be a HYPERglycemic
    event. Coversely, a HYPO is a result of taking too much insulin, or not consuming enough calories after an insulin dose. Although both are
    serious conditions, hypoglycemia is more life-threatening than
    hyperglycemia in the short term. If you encounter someone who you know
    is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency
    assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened
    drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to
    administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    I assume Summer has type 1 diabetes, which usually develops in childhood
    or adolescence, in which the body produces no insulin of its own. With
    type 2, which I have, the body's natural insulin level is low, but it
    can be managed with synthetic insulin, as well as other medications,
    diet and exercise.

    Summer has to inject herself several times a day, so yeah, type 1, and she must normally be eating enough as she is complaining about putting on weight. I thought the same thing about what Todd said because we knew what she had been drinking!

    I know if it is a hypo - feed them something sweet. But if the are unconcious I
    wouldn't know if it was hypo or hyper!

    This plot has echoes of teenager Katy Harris, who also had type 1
    diabetes. She arrived with her family under a witness protection
    programme in 2002. In 2005, after accidentally killing her father Tommy,
    she committed suicide by drinking sugared water. It might have been
    quicker if she had overdosed on insulin!

    Incidentally, Thomas Craig, who played Tommy Harris, is well known in
    Canada as a police inspector on Murdoch Mysteries, set in 1890s Toronto, which has been running on CBC since 2008. And Richard Fleesman, who
    played Katy's brother Craig Harris, went on to be a successful actor, musician and singer-sonwriter. Richard's father David, sister Emily and mother Sue Jenkins have all appeared on Corrie.


    That family gets about. :-)

    You left out that Katie was played by Lucy-Jo Hudson and was married to Alan Halsall ( Tyrone) !



    --
    kat
    >^..^<

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  • From Lucretia Borgia@21:1/5 to All on Mon Aug 2 08:41:06 2021
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 09:32:47 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 02/08/2021 00:10, MartinS wrote:
    In the recent episode where Todd (boo, hiss!) finds Summer passed out
    because she has skipped her insulin shots and has been drinking sweet
    cider, he says "She was having a hypo."

    If she had an excess of blood sugar, that would be a HYPERglycemic
    event. Coversely, a HYPO is a result of taking too much insulin, or not
    consuming enough calories after an insulin dose. Although both are
    serious conditions, hypoglycemia is more life-threatening than
    hyperglycemia in the short term. If you encounter someone who you know
    is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency
    assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened
    drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to
    administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    I assume Summer has type 1 diabetes, which usually develops in childhood
    or adolescence, in which the body produces no insulin of its own. With
    type 2, which I have, the body's natural insulin level is low, but it
    can be managed with synthetic insulin, as well as other medications,
    diet and exercise.

    Summer has to inject herself several times a day, so yeah, type 1, and she must
    normally be eating enough as she is complaining about putting on weight. I >thought the same thing about what Todd said because we knew what she had been >drinking!

    I wondered why they wouldn't get her that gizmo that they put on the
    arm then she just holds her phone to it and it tells her what her
    levels are and the correct dosage of insulin she needs. A friend has
    one and says she has never felt so good as she does now, likely
    because even after all these years she got casual about it.

    I know if it is a hypo - feed them something sweet. But if the are unconcious I
    wouldn't know if it was hypo or hyper!

    This plot has echoes of teenager Katy Harris, who also had type 1
    diabetes. She arrived with her family under a witness protection
    programme in 2002. In 2005, after accidentally killing her father Tommy,
    she committed suicide by drinking sugared water. It might have been
    quicker if she had overdosed on insulin!

    Incidentally, Thomas Craig, who played Tommy Harris, is well known in
    Canada as a police inspector on Murdoch Mysteries, set in 1890s Toronto,
    which has been running on CBC since 2008. And Richard Fleesman, who
    played Katy's brother Craig Harris, went on to be a successful actor,
    musician and singer-sonwriter. Richard's father David, sister Emily and
    mother Sue Jenkins have all appeared on Corrie.

    I've seen a few Murdoch Mysteries but didn't know that!


    That family gets about. :-)

    You left out that Katie was played by Lucy-Jo Hudson and was married to Alan >Halsall ( Tyrone) !

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From kat@21:1/5 to Lucretia Borgia on Mon Aug 2 20:52:07 2021
    On 02/08/2021 12:41, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 09:32:47 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 02/08/2021 00:10, MartinS wrote:
    In the recent episode where Todd (boo, hiss!) finds Summer passed out
    because she has skipped her insulin shots and has been drinking sweet
    cider, he says "She was having a hypo."

    If she had an excess of blood sugar, that would be a HYPERglycemic
    event. Coversely, a HYPO is a result of taking too much insulin, or not
    consuming enough calories after an insulin dose. Although both are
    serious conditions, hypoglycemia is more life-threatening than
    hyperglycemia in the short term. If you encounter someone who you know
    is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency
    assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened
    drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to
    administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    I assume Summer has type 1 diabetes, which usually develops in childhood >>> or adolescence, in which the body produces no insulin of its own. With
    type 2, which I have, the body's natural insulin level is low, but it
    can be managed with synthetic insulin, as well as other medications,
    diet and exercise.

    Summer has to inject herself several times a day, so yeah, type 1, and she must
    normally be eating enough as she is complaining about putting on weight. I >> thought the same thing about what Todd said because we knew what she had been
    drinking!

    I wondered why they wouldn't get her that gizmo that they put on the
    arm then she just holds her phone to it and it tells her what her
    levels are and the correct dosage of insulin she needs. A friend has
    one and says she has never felt so good as she does now, likely
    because even after all these years she got casual about it.

    Availability on the NHS maybe, or the cost?

    No doubt all the problems will disappear in a little while, to be mentioned rarely, like David's epilepsy, Tracy's transplant, Nick's head injury etc., so maybe that's when she "gets" the gizmo. :-)

    <snip>

    Incidentally, Thomas Craig, who played Tommy Harris, is well known in
    Canada as a police inspector on Murdoch Mysteries, set in 1890s Toronto, >>> which has been running on CBC since 2008. And Richard Fleesman, who
    played Katy's brother Craig Harris, went on to be a successful actor,
    musician and singer-sonwriter. Richard's father David, sister Emily and
    mother Sue Jenkins have all appeared on Corrie.

    I've seen a few Murdoch Mysteries but didn't know that!

    I have seen trailers so I had noticed.
    --
    kat
    >^..^<

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lucretia Borgia@21:1/5 to All on Mon Aug 2 18:21:26 2021
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 20:52:07 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 02/08/2021 12:41, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 09:32:47 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 02/08/2021 00:10, MartinS wrote:
    In the recent episode where Todd (boo, hiss!) finds Summer passed out
    because she has skipped her insulin shots and has been drinking sweet
    cider, he says "She was having a hypo."

    If she had an excess of blood sugar, that would be a HYPERglycemic
    event. Coversely, a HYPO is a result of taking too much insulin, or not >>>> consuming enough calories after an insulin dose. Although both are
    serious conditions, hypoglycemia is more life-threatening than
    hyperglycemia in the short term. If you encounter someone who you know >>>> is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency
    assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened
    drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to
    administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    I assume Summer has type 1 diabetes, which usually develops in childhood >>>> or adolescence, in which the body produces no insulin of its own. With >>>> type 2, which I have, the body's natural insulin level is low, but it
    can be managed with synthetic insulin, as well as other medications,
    diet and exercise.

    Summer has to inject herself several times a day, so yeah, type 1, and she must
    normally be eating enough as she is complaining about putting on weight. I
    thought the same thing about what Todd said because we knew what she had been
    drinking!

    I wondered why they wouldn't get her that gizmo that they put on the
    arm then she just holds her phone to it and it tells her what her
    levels are and the correct dosage of insulin she needs. A friend has
    one and says she has never felt so good as she does now, likely
    because even after all these years she got casual about it.

    Availability on the NHS maybe, or the cost?

    No doubt all the problems will disappear in a little while, to be mentioned >rarely, like David's epilepsy, Tracy's transplant, Nick's head injury etc., so >maybe that's when she "gets" the gizmo. :-)

    <snip>

    Incidentally, Thomas Craig, who played Tommy Harris, is well known in
    Canada as a police inspector on Murdoch Mysteries, set in 1890s Toronto, >>>> which has been running on CBC since 2008. And Richard Fleesman, who
    played Katy's brother Craig Harris, went on to be a successful actor,
    musician and singer-sonwriter. Richard's father David, sister Emily and >>>> mother Sue Jenkins have all appeared on Corrie.

    I've seen a few Murdoch Mysteries but didn't know that!

    I have seen trailers so I had noticed.

    Not a bad series and nicely done - I usually watched it when waiting
    for the programme on :)

    How's your summer going over there? Here we have an irritating wind
    that gets up mid afternoon, enough to make it unpleasant outside. Also
    had much more rain than usual but maybe that has prevented forest
    fires here, so shouldn't gripe about it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From kat@21:1/5 to Lucretia Borgia on Mon Aug 2 23:31:28 2021
    On 02/08/2021 22:21, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 20:52:07 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 02/08/2021 12:41, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 09:32:47 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 02/08/2021 00:10, MartinS wrote:
    In the recent episode where Todd (boo, hiss!) finds Summer passed out >>>>> because she has skipped her insulin shots and has been drinking sweet >>>>> cider, he says "She was having a hypo."

    If she had an excess of blood sugar, that would be a HYPERglycemic
    event. Coversely, a HYPO is a result of taking too much insulin, or not >>>>> consuming enough calories after an insulin dose. Although both are
    serious conditions, hypoglycemia is more life-threatening than
    hyperglycemia in the short term. If you encounter someone who you know >>>>> is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency
    assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened
    drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to
    administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    I assume Summer has type 1 diabetes, which usually develops in childhood >>>>> or adolescence, in which the body produces no insulin of its own. With >>>>> type 2, which I have, the body's natural insulin level is low, but it >>>>> can be managed with synthetic insulin, as well as other medications, >>>>> diet and exercise.

    Summer has to inject herself several times a day, so yeah, type 1, and she must
    normally be eating enough as she is complaining about putting on weight. I
    thought the same thing about what Todd said because we knew what she had been
    drinking!

    I wondered why they wouldn't get her that gizmo that they put on the
    arm then she just holds her phone to it and it tells her what her
    levels are and the correct dosage of insulin she needs. A friend has
    one and says she has never felt so good as she does now, likely
    because even after all these years she got casual about it.

    Availability on the NHS maybe, or the cost?

    No doubt all the problems will disappear in a little while, to be mentioned >> rarely, like David's epilepsy, Tracy's transplant, Nick's head injury etc., so
    maybe that's when she "gets" the gizmo. :-)

    <snip>

    Incidentally, Thomas Craig, who played Tommy Harris, is well known in >>>>> Canada as a police inspector on Murdoch Mysteries, set in 1890s Toronto, >>>>> which has been running on CBC since 2008. And Richard Fleesman, who
    played Katy's brother Craig Harris, went on to be a successful actor, >>>>> musician and singer-sonwriter. Richard's father David, sister Emily and >>>>> mother Sue Jenkins have all appeared on Corrie.

    I've seen a few Murdoch Mysteries but didn't know that!

    I have seen trailers so I had noticed.

    Not a bad series and nicely done - I usually watched it when waiting
    for the programme on :)

    I was hoping one of the channels might start at the beginning. But I think they
    did and I didn't pick it up soon enough. Too much else for the amount of time I watch tv anyway! Somehow though there wil be another chance!


    How's your summer going over there? Here we have an irritating wind
    that gets up mid afternoon, enough to make it unpleasant outside. Also
    had much more rain than usual but maybe that has prevented forest
    fires here, so shouldn't gripe about it.


    Horrible. Not a good one at all. It's not been all that warm, it has been windy and wet. Our figs got blown off the tree, long before they ripened. We got a lot last year.

    We had a little luck last week, holiday in Norfolk. Only 2 bad days, but that was a good week. Came home and back to chill ( and we only live 75 minutes drive away ).



    --
    kat
    >^..^<

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lucretia Borgia@21:1/5 to All on Mon Aug 2 20:08:13 2021
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 23:31:28 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 02/08/2021 22:21, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 20:52:07 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 02/08/2021 12:41, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 09:32:47 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 02/08/2021 00:10, MartinS wrote:
    In the recent episode where Todd (boo, hiss!) finds Summer passed out >>>>>> because she has skipped her insulin shots and has been drinking sweet >>>>>> cider, he says "She was having a hypo."

    If she had an excess of blood sugar, that would be a HYPERglycemic >>>>>> event. Coversely, a HYPO is a result of taking too much insulin, or not >>>>>> consuming enough calories after an insulin dose. Although both are >>>>>> serious conditions, hypoglycemia is more life-threatening than
    hyperglycemia in the short term. If you encounter someone who you know >>>>>> is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency
    assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened >>>>>> drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to >>>>>> administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    I assume Summer has type 1 diabetes, which usually develops in childhood >>>>>> or adolescence, in which the body produces no insulin of its own. With >>>>>> type 2, which I have, the body's natural insulin level is low, but it >>>>>> can be managed with synthetic insulin, as well as other medications, >>>>>> diet and exercise.

    Summer has to inject herself several times a day, so yeah, type 1, and she must
    normally be eating enough as she is complaining about putting on weight. I
    thought the same thing about what Todd said because we knew what she had been
    drinking!

    I wondered why they wouldn't get her that gizmo that they put on the
    arm then she just holds her phone to it and it tells her what her
    levels are and the correct dosage of insulin she needs. A friend has
    one and says she has never felt so good as she does now, likely
    because even after all these years she got casual about it.

    Availability on the NHS maybe, or the cost?

    No doubt all the problems will disappear in a little while, to be mentioned >>> rarely, like David's epilepsy, Tracy's transplant, Nick's head injury etc., so
    maybe that's when she "gets" the gizmo. :-)

    <snip>

    Incidentally, Thomas Craig, who played Tommy Harris, is well known in >>>>>> Canada as a police inspector on Murdoch Mysteries, set in 1890s Toronto, >>>>>> which has been running on CBC since 2008. And Richard Fleesman, who >>>>>> played Katy's brother Craig Harris, went on to be a successful actor, >>>>>> musician and singer-sonwriter. Richard's father David, sister Emily and >>>>>> mother Sue Jenkins have all appeared on Corrie.

    I've seen a few Murdoch Mysteries but didn't know that!

    I have seen trailers so I had noticed.

    Not a bad series and nicely done - I usually watched it when waiting
    for the programme on :)

    I was hoping one of the channels might start at the beginning. But I think they
    did and I didn't pick it up soon enough. Too much else for the amount of time I
    watch tv anyway! Somehow though there wil be another chance!


    How's your summer going over there? Here we have an irritating wind
    that gets up mid afternoon, enough to make it unpleasant outside. Also
    had much more rain than usual but maybe that has prevented forest
    fires here, so shouldn't gripe about it.


    Horrible. Not a good one at all. It's not been all that warm, it has been >windy and wet. Our figs got blown off the tree, long before they ripened. We >got a lot last year.

    We had a little luck last week, holiday in Norfolk. Only 2 bad days, but that >was a good week. Came home and back to chill ( and we only live 75 minutes >drive away ).

    In the 60s David did a year at HMS Ganges and I quite liked Norfolk
    but not in winter when the wind was sweeping through and it was
    downright difficult to push a pram with three babes into it lol

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From kat@21:1/5 to Lucretia Borgia on Tue Aug 3 08:13:52 2021
    On 03/08/2021 00:08, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 23:31:28 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 02/08/2021 22:21, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 20:52:07 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 02/08/2021 12:41, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 09:32:47 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 02/08/2021 00:10, MartinS wrote:
    In the recent episode where Todd (boo, hiss!) finds Summer passed out >>>>>>> because she has skipped her insulin shots and has been drinking sweet >>>>>>> cider, he says "She was having a hypo."

    If she had an excess of blood sugar, that would be a HYPERglycemic >>>>>>> event. Coversely, a HYPO is a result of taking too much insulin, or not >>>>>>> consuming enough calories after an insulin dose. Although both are >>>>>>> serious conditions, hypoglycemia is more life-threatening than
    hyperglycemia in the short term. If you encounter someone who you know >>>>>>> is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency >>>>>>> assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened >>>>>>> drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to >>>>>>> administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    I assume Summer has type 1 diabetes, which usually develops in childhood
    or adolescence, in which the body produces no insulin of its own. With >>>>>>> type 2, which I have, the body's natural insulin level is low, but it >>>>>>> can be managed with synthetic insulin, as well as other medications, >>>>>>> diet and exercise.

    Summer has to inject herself several times a day, so yeah, type 1, and she must
    normally be eating enough as she is complaining about putting on weight. I
    thought the same thing about what Todd said because we knew what she had been
    drinking!

    I wondered why they wouldn't get her that gizmo that they put on the >>>>> arm then she just holds her phone to it and it tells her what her
    levels are and the correct dosage of insulin she needs. A friend has >>>>> one and says she has never felt so good as she does now, likely
    because even after all these years she got casual about it.

    Availability on the NHS maybe, or the cost?

    No doubt all the problems will disappear in a little while, to be mentioned
    rarely, like David's epilepsy, Tracy's transplant, Nick's head injury etc., so
    maybe that's when she "gets" the gizmo. :-)

    <snip>

    Incidentally, Thomas Craig, who played Tommy Harris, is well known in >>>>>>> Canada as a police inspector on Murdoch Mysteries, set in 1890s Toronto,
    which has been running on CBC since 2008. And Richard Fleesman, who >>>>>>> played Katy's brother Craig Harris, went on to be a successful actor, >>>>>>> musician and singer-sonwriter. Richard's father David, sister Emily and >>>>>>> mother Sue Jenkins have all appeared on Corrie.

    I've seen a few Murdoch Mysteries but didn't know that!

    I have seen trailers so I had noticed.

    Not a bad series and nicely done - I usually watched it when waiting
    for the programme on :)

    I was hoping one of the channels might start at the beginning. But I think they
    did and I didn't pick it up soon enough. Too much else for the amount of time I
    watch tv anyway! Somehow though there wil be another chance!


    How's your summer going over there? Here we have an irritating wind
    that gets up mid afternoon, enough to make it unpleasant outside. Also
    had much more rain than usual but maybe that has prevented forest
    fires here, so shouldn't gripe about it.


    Horrible. Not a good one at all. It's not been all that warm, it has been >> windy and wet. Our figs got blown off the tree, long before they ripened. We
    got a lot last year.

    We had a little luck last week, holiday in Norfolk. Only 2 bad days, but that
    was a good week. Came home and back to chill ( and we only live 75 minutes >> drive away ).

    In the 60s David did a year at HMS Ganges and I quite liked Norfolk
    but not in winter when the wind was sweeping through and it was
    downright difficult to push a pram with three babes into it lol



    It would be windy at Shotley. At least it should have been fairly flat. But a pram with 3 babes is going to be heavy!

    It's half an hour away for me, other direction to our holiday, and all along the
    river. I don't know how much you got around that year, but, being biassed, I think our part of East Anglia is rather nice.:-)


    I visited HMS Ganges once with a church group I was in as a child, but really all I recall is they served us with fishpaste sandwiches! Must have been sometime around 58 to 60 I guess.


    --
    kat
    >^..^<

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Lucretia Borgia@21:1/5 to All on Tue Aug 3 09:43:47 2021
    On Tue, 3 Aug 2021 08:13:52 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 03/08/2021 00:08, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 23:31:28 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:





    How's your summer going over there? Here we have an irritating wind
    that gets up mid afternoon, enough to make it unpleasant outside. Also >>>> had much more rain than usual but maybe that has prevented forest
    fires here, so shouldn't gripe about it.


    Horrible. Not a good one at all. It's not been all that warm, it has been >>> windy and wet. Our figs got blown off the tree, long before they ripened. We
    got a lot last year.

    We had a little luck last week, holiday in Norfolk. Only 2 bad days, but that
    was a good week. Came home and back to chill ( and we only live 75 minutes >>> drive away ).

    In the 60s David did a year at HMS Ganges and I quite liked Norfolk
    but not in winter when the wind was sweeping through and it was
    downright difficult to push a pram with three babes into it lol



    It would be windy at Shotley. At least it should have been fairly flat. But a >pram with 3 babes is going to be heavy!

    My solution was to leave home with the wind at my back and arrive at
    Ganges as David was coming home, then I got a ride home against the
    wind. We lived in the married quarters in Shotley Gate.

    It's half an hour away for me, other direction to our holiday, and all along the
    river. I don't know how much you got around that year, but, being biassed, I >think our part of East Anglia is rather nice.:-)

    Most of the summer I would take them over to a beach, very stony but
    nice, can't remember it's name now :( Someone told me it's a huge
    container port now.


    I visited HMS Ganges once with a church group I was in as a child, but really >all I recall is they served us with fishpaste sandwiches! Must have been >sometime around 58 to 60 I guess.

    Oh yuck! For the lads at Ganges their aim was to be Button Boy, i.e.
    the one who stood on the button at the top of the mast when they
    manned the mast at the end of the Queens inspection. Usually in June.
    When practising that there were several accidents, some nasty and I
    felt it was not really a relevant thing since we were long past the
    days of sail and those masts had not been set in asphalt :(

    We enjoyed our time there, mostly because for once in a long while
    David had a shore job :)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From kat@21:1/5 to Lucretia Borgia on Tue Aug 3 22:08:14 2021
    On 03/08/2021 13:43, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Tue, 3 Aug 2021 08:13:52 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 03/08/2021 00:08, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 23:31:28 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:





    How's your summer going over there? Here we have an irritating wind >>>>> that gets up mid afternoon, enough to make it unpleasant outside. Also >>>>> had much more rain than usual but maybe that has prevented forest
    fires here, so shouldn't gripe about it.


    Horrible. Not a good one at all. It's not been all that warm, it has been
    windy and wet. Our figs got blown off the tree, long before they ripened. We
    got a lot last year.

    We had a little luck last week, holiday in Norfolk. Only 2 bad days, but that
    was a good week. Came home and back to chill ( and we only live 75 minutes
    drive away ).

    In the 60s David did a year at HMS Ganges and I quite liked Norfolk
    but not in winter when the wind was sweeping through and it was
    downright difficult to push a pram with three babes into it lol



    It would be windy at Shotley. At least it should have been fairly flat. But a
    pram with 3 babes is going to be heavy!

    My solution was to leave home with the wind at my back and arrive at
    Ganges as David was coming home, then I got a ride home against the
    wind. We lived in the married quarters in Shotley Gate.

    Clever. :-)


    It's half an hour away for me, other direction to our holiday, and all along the
    river. I don't know how much you got around that year, but, being biassed, I
    think our part of East Anglia is rather nice.:-)

    Most of the summer I would take them over to a beach, very stony but
    nice, can't remember it's name now :( Someone told me it's a huge
    container port now.

    Felixstowe? Other side of the river. That is indeed a very big container port at the end looking over towards Shotley and Harwich. We like to go down there. At Landguard Point, the end of the docks, there is a fort and a very pleasant cafe. And a ferry to Harwich. The rest of Felixstowe is a normal enough seaside
    resort, and there is a lot more sand than there was when I was young.




    I visited HMS Ganges once with a church group I was in as a child, but really
    all I recall is they served us with fishpaste sandwiches! Must have been
    sometime around 58 to 60 I guess.

    Oh yuck! For the lads at Ganges their aim was to be Button Boy, i.e.
    the one who stood on the button at the top of the mast when they
    manned the mast at the end of the Queens inspection. Usually in June.
    When practising that there were several accidents, some nasty and I
    felt it was not really a relevant thing since we were long past the
    days of sail and those masts had not been set in asphalt :(

    We enjoyed our time there, mostly because for once in a long while
    David had a shore job :)


    Was talking to my husband about this earlier. His grandfather worked at Ganges,
    he was a tailor, making/repairing uniforms. But he must have retired anout 1962.

    --
    kat
    >^..^<

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Lucretia Borgia@21:1/5 to All on Tue Aug 3 18:49:18 2021
    On Tue, 3 Aug 2021 22:08:14 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 03/08/2021 13:43, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Tue, 3 Aug 2021 08:13:52 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 03/08/2021 00:08, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 23:31:28 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:





    How's your summer going over there? Here we have an irritating wind >>>>>> that gets up mid afternoon, enough to make it unpleasant outside. Also >>>>>> had much more rain than usual but maybe that has prevented forest
    fires here, so shouldn't gripe about it.


    Horrible. Not a good one at all. It's not been all that warm, it has been
    windy and wet. Our figs got blown off the tree, long before they ripened. We
    got a lot last year.

    We had a little luck last week, holiday in Norfolk. Only 2 bad days, but that
    was a good week. Came home and back to chill ( and we only live 75 minutes
    drive away ).

    In the 60s David did a year at HMS Ganges and I quite liked Norfolk
    but not in winter when the wind was sweeping through and it was
    downright difficult to push a pram with three babes into it lol



    It would be windy at Shotley. At least it should have been fairly flat. But a
    pram with 3 babes is going to be heavy!

    My solution was to leave home with the wind at my back and arrive at
    Ganges as David was coming home, then I got a ride home against the
    wind. We lived in the married quarters in Shotley Gate.

    Clever. :-)


    It's half an hour away for me, other direction to our holiday, and all along the
    river. I don't know how much you got around that year, but, being biassed, I
    think our part of East Anglia is rather nice.:-)

    Most of the summer I would take them over to a beach, very stony but
    nice, can't remember it's name now :( Someone told me it's a huge
    container port now.

    Felixstowe? Other side of the river. That is indeed a very big container port
    at the end looking over towards Shotley and Harwich. We like to go down there. >At Landguard Point, the end of the docks, there is a fort and a very pleasant >cafe. And a ferry to Harwich. The rest of Felixstowe is a normal enough seaside
    resort, and there is a lot more sand than there was when I was young.


    Yes, that was it, Felixstowe! It was all pebbles then but really that
    wasn't so bad, less sand in the car afterwards :)


    I visited HMS Ganges once with a church group I was in as a child, but really
    all I recall is they served us with fishpaste sandwiches! Must have been >>> sometime around 58 to 60 I guess.

    Oh yuck! For the lads at Ganges their aim was to be Button Boy, i.e.
    the one who stood on the button at the top of the mast when they
    manned the mast at the end of the Queens inspection. Usually in June.
    When practising that there were several accidents, some nasty and I
    felt it was not really a relevant thing since we were long past the
    days of sail and those masts had not been set in asphalt :(

    We enjoyed our time there, mostly because for once in a long while
    David had a shore job :)


    Was talking to my husband about this earlier. His grandfather worked at Ganges,
    he was a tailor, making/repairing uniforms. But he must have retired anout 1962.

    We went there in 1962, supposed to be for two years but in the end he
    went to sea again after one of the Admirals asked for him
    specifically, I was not happy about that.

    I laugh here when they announce a returning ship and it has been gone
    6 months!!! David frequently did two years and there was no email
    then, plus it was often difficult to try and make a phone call from a
    foreign port.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From kat@21:1/5 to Lucretia Borgia on Wed Aug 4 11:03:12 2021
    On 03/08/2021 22:49, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Tue, 3 Aug 2021 22:08:14 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 03/08/2021 13:43, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Tue, 3 Aug 2021 08:13:52 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 03/08/2021 00:08, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 23:31:28 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:





    How's your summer going over there? Here we have an irritating wind >>>>>>> that gets up mid afternoon, enough to make it unpleasant outside. Also >>>>>>> had much more rain than usual but maybe that has prevented forest >>>>>>> fires here, so shouldn't gripe about it.


    Horrible. Not a good one at all. It's not been all that warm, it has been
    windy and wet. Our figs got blown off the tree, long before they ripened. We
    got a lot last year.

    We had a little luck last week, holiday in Norfolk. Only 2 bad days, but that
    was a good week. Came home and back to chill ( and we only live 75 minutes
    drive away ).

    In the 60s David did a year at HMS Ganges and I quite liked Norfolk
    but not in winter when the wind was sweeping through and it was
    downright difficult to push a pram with three babes into it lol



    It would be windy at Shotley. At least it should have been fairly flat. But a
    pram with 3 babes is going to be heavy!

    My solution was to leave home with the wind at my back and arrive at
    Ganges as David was coming home, then I got a ride home against the
    wind. We lived in the married quarters in Shotley Gate.

    Clever. :-)


    It's half an hour away for me, other direction to our holiday, and all along the
    river. I don't know how much you got around that year, but, being biassed, I
    think our part of East Anglia is rather nice.:-)

    Most of the summer I would take them over to a beach, very stony but
    nice, can't remember it's name now :( Someone told me it's a huge
    container port now.

    Felixstowe? Other side of the river. That is indeed a very big container port
    at the end looking over towards Shotley and Harwich. We like to go down there.
    At Landguard Point, the end of the docks, there is a fort and a very pleasant
    cafe. And a ferry to Harwich. The rest of Felixstowe is a normal enough seaside
    resort, and there is a lot more sand than there was when I was young.


    Yes, that was it, Felixstowe! It was all pebbles then but really that
    wasn't so bad, less sand in the car afterwards :)

    Still has a lot of pebbles, but the building of the docks and some new breakwaters have allowed some sand to show through, nice patches where it does get covered by the tide, so doesn't make too much mess.:-)

    It's a nice place, Felixstowe, long way from Landguard to the Ferry at the other
    end, cafes at both ends too, so quiet parts and busy parts.




    I visited HMS Ganges once with a church group I was in as a child, but really
    all I recall is they served us with fishpaste sandwiches! Must have been >>>> sometime around 58 to 60 I guess.

    Oh yuck! For the lads at Ganges their aim was to be Button Boy, i.e.
    the one who stood on the button at the top of the mast when they
    manned the mast at the end of the Queens inspection. Usually in June.
    When practising that there were several accidents, some nasty and I
    felt it was not really a relevant thing since we were long past the
    days of sail and those masts had not been set in asphalt :(

    We enjoyed our time there, mostly because for once in a long while
    David had a shore job :)


    Was talking to my husband about this earlier. His grandfather worked at Ganges,
    he was a tailor, making/repairing uniforms. But he must have retired anout 1962.

    We went there in 1962, supposed to be for two years but in the end he
    went to sea again after one of the Admirals asked for him
    specifically, I was not happy about that.

    That would be the year I turned 12 in the summer. :-)

    I can see why reading the bit below!


    I laugh here when they announce a returning ship and it has been gone
    6 months!!! David frequently did two years and there was no email
    then, plus it was often difficult to try and make a phone call from a
    foreign port.



    --
    kat
    >^..^<

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From James Heaton@21:1/5 to kat on Tue Aug 3 21:26:58 2021
    "kat" <littlelionne@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:imr0n9FtcjoU1@mid.individual.net...
    On 02/08/2021 12:41, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Mon, 2 Aug 2021 09:32:47 +0100, kat <littlelionne@hotmail.com>
    wrote:

    On 02/08/2021 00:10, MartinS wrote:
    In the recent episode where Todd (boo, hiss!) finds Summer passed out
    because she has skipped her insulin shots and has been drinking sweet
    cider, he says "She was having a hypo."

    If she had an excess of blood sugar, that would be a HYPERglycemic
    event. Coversely, a HYPO is a result of taking too much insulin, or not >>>> consuming enough calories after an insulin dose. Although both are
    serious conditions, hypoglycemia is more life-threatening than
    hyperglycemia in the short term. If you encounter someone who you know >>>> is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency
    assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened
    drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to
    administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    I assume Summer has type 1 diabetes, which usually develops in
    childhood
    or adolescence, in which the body produces no insulin of its own. With >>>> type 2, which I have, the body's natural insulin level is low, but it
    can be managed with synthetic insulin, as well as other medications,
    diet and exercise.

    Summer has to inject herself several times a day, so yeah, type 1, and
    she must
    normally be eating enough as she is complaining about putting on weight. >>> I
    thought the same thing about what Todd said because we knew what she had >>> been
    drinking!

    I wondered why they wouldn't get her that gizmo that they put on the
    arm then she just holds her phone to it and it tells her what her
    levels are and the correct dosage of insulin she needs. A friend has
    one and says she has never felt so good as she does now, likely
    because even after all these years she got casual about it.

    Availability on the NHS maybe, or the cost?

    The former - apparently it's only available to T1 pregnant women, anyone who has disabling hypos, or anyone who has to test 8+ times a day.

    James

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  • From Calvin Henry-Cotnam@21:1/5 to All on Thu Aug 5 17:18:18 2021
    MartinS (me@my.place.invalid) said...
    If you encounter someone who you know
    is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency
    assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened
    drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to
    administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    It's been years since I took First Aid, but this is exactly what was
    taught - just offer a sweetened drink. It does not drastically hurt HYPERglycemia and will help HYPOglycemia.

    Incidentally, Thomas Craig, who played Tommy Harris, is well known in
    Canada as a police inspector on Murdoch Mysteries, set in 1890s Toronto, >which has been running on CBC since 2008.

    Not to mention the first few seasons that were on CITY-TV before that.
    The show is marketed by ITV International.

    Someone I know went on a date with Thomas Craig. She tells me he was
    a lot like Thomas Craig, as far as liking his drink was concerned. ;-)
    She declined a second date.


    This plot has echoes of teenager Katy Harris, ...

    Speaking of her, didn't the actress (Lucy-Jo Hudson) used to be (or is
    still?) married to Alan Halsall (Tyrone)?


    --
    Calvin Henry-Cotnam
    "Unusual or extreme reactions to events caused by negligence
    are imaginable, but not reasonably foreseeable"
    - Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin, May 2008

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  • From GordonD@21:1/5 to Calvin Henry-Cotnam on Sun Aug 22 16:25:57 2021
    On 05/08/2021 22:18, Calvin Henry-Cotnam wrote:
    MartinS (me@my.place.invalid) said...
    If you encounter someone who you know
    is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency
    assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened
    drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to
    administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    It's been years since I took First Aid, but this is exactly what was
    taught - just offer a sweetened drink. It does not drastically hurt HYPERglycemia and will help HYPOglycemia.

    Incidentally, Thomas Craig, who played Tommy Harris, is well known in
    Canada as a police inspector on Murdoch Mysteries, set in 1890s Toronto,
    which has been running on CBC since 2008.

    Not to mention the first few seasons that were on CITY-TV before that.
    The show is marketed by ITV International.

    Someone I know went on a date with Thomas Craig. She tells me he was
    a lot like Thomas Craig, as far as liking his drink was concerned. ;-)
    She declined a second date.


    This plot has echoes of teenager Katy Harris, ...

    Speaking of her, didn't the actress (Lucy-Jo Hudson) used to be (or is still?) married to Alan Halsall (Tyrone)?



    They divorced in 2018.
    --
    Gordon Davie
    Edinburgh, Scotland

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  • From GordonD@21:1/5 to GordonD on Sun Aug 22 16:33:34 2021
    On 22/08/2021 16:25, GordonD wrote:
    On 05/08/2021 22:18, Calvin Henry-Cotnam wrote:
    MartinS (me@my.place.invalid) said...
    If you encounter someone who you know
    is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency
    assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened
    drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to
    administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    It's been years since I took First Aid, but this is exactly what was
    taught - just offer a sweetened drink. It does not drastically hurt
    HYPERglycemia and will help HYPOglycemia.

    Incidentally, Thomas Craig, who played Tommy Harris, is well known in
    Canada as a police inspector on Murdoch Mysteries, set in 1890s Toronto, >>> which has been running on CBC since 2008.

    Not to mention the first few seasons that were on CITY-TV before that.
    The show is marketed by ITV International.

    Someone I know went on a date with Thomas Craig. She tells me he was
    a lot like Thomas Craig, as far as liking his drink was concerned. ;-)
    She declined a second date.


    This plot has echoes of teenager Katy Harris, ...

    Speaking of her, didn't the actress (Lucy-Jo Hudson) used to be (or is
    still?) married to Alan Halsall (Tyrone)?



    They divorced in 2018.

    Alan Halsall is now with Tisha Merry, who used to play Steph Britton.
    --
    Gordon Davie
    Edinburgh, Scotland

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Lucretia Borgia@21:1/5 to All on Sun Aug 22 14:52:15 2021
    On Sun, 22 Aug 2021 16:33:34 +0100, GordonD <g.davie@btinternet.com>
    wrote:

    On 22/08/2021 16:25, GordonD wrote:
    On 05/08/2021 22:18, Calvin Henry-Cotnam wrote:
    MartinS (me@my.place.invalid) said...
    If you encounter someone who you know
    is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency
    assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened
    drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to
    administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    It's been years since I took First Aid, but this is exactly what was
    taught - just offer a sweetened drink. It does not drastically hurt
    HYPERglycemia and will help HYPOglycemia.

    Incidentally, Thomas Craig, who played Tommy Harris, is well known in
    Canada as a police inspector on Murdoch Mysteries, set in 1890s Toronto, >>>> which has been running on CBC since 2008.

    Not to mention the first few seasons that were on CITY-TV before that.
    The show is marketed by ITV International.

    Someone I know went on a date with Thomas Craig. She tells me he was
    a lot like Thomas Craig, as far as liking his drink was concerned. ;-)
    She declined a second date.


    This plot has echoes of teenager Katy Harris, ...

    Speaking of her, didn't the actress (Lucy-Jo Hudson) used to be (or is
    still?) married to Alan Halsall (Tyrone)?



    They divorced in 2018.

    Alan Halsall is now with Tisha Merry, who used to play Steph Britton.

    Is that what they mean by 'keeping it in the family?' :)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From kat@21:1/5 to Lucretia Borgia on Sun Aug 22 22:48:48 2021
    On 22/08/2021 18:52, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    On Sun, 22 Aug 2021 16:33:34 +0100, GordonD <g.davie@btinternet.com>
    wrote:

    On 22/08/2021 16:25, GordonD wrote:
    On 05/08/2021 22:18, Calvin Henry-Cotnam wrote:
    MartinS (me@my.place.invalid) said...
    If you encounter someone who you know
    is diabetic and who is unresponsive, immediately summon emergency
    assistance. If he or she is conscious, you could offer a sweetened
    drink. In no circumstances should an unqualified person attempt to
    administer insulin to an unconscious patient.

    It's been years since I took First Aid, but this is exactly what was
    taught - just offer a sweetened drink. It does not drastically hurt
    HYPERglycemia and will help HYPOglycemia.

    Incidentally, Thomas Craig, who played Tommy Harris, is well known in >>>>> Canada as a police inspector on Murdoch Mysteries, set in 1890s Toronto, >>>>> which has been running on CBC since 2008.

    Not to mention the first few seasons that were on CITY-TV before that. >>>> The show is marketed by ITV International.

    Someone I know went on a date with Thomas Craig. She tells me he was
    a lot like Thomas Craig, as far as liking his drink was concerned. ;-) >>>> She declined a second date.


    This plot has echoes of teenager Katy Harris, ...

    Speaking of her, didn't the actress (Lucy-Jo Hudson) used to be (or is >>>> still?) married to Alan Halsall (Tyrone)?



    They divorced in 2018.

    Alan Halsall is now with Tisha Merry, who used to play Steph Britton.

    Is that what they mean by 'keeping it in the family?' :)


    Popular place to meet people, at work. :-)


    --
    kat
    >^..^<

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  • From capricorn40@21:1/5 to All on Tue Aug 24 12:51:20 2021

    This plot has echoes of teenager Katy Harris, who also had type 1
    diabetes. She arrived with her family under a witness protection
    programme in 2002. In 2005, after accidentally killing her father Tommy,
    she committed suicide by drinking sugared water. It might have been
    quicker if she had overdosed on insulin!

    I remember that storyline. She died from Diabetic Ketoacidosis, which when there is too much sugar and the liver produces acid in the blood. I thought she died a bit too quickly from this since it happened overnight. And you are right, insulin overdose
    would have been much quicker.

    --
    Martin S

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  • From Calvin Henry-Cotnam@21:1/5 to All on Thu Aug 26 17:50:25 2021
    GordonD (g.davie@btinternet.com) said...
    On 22/08/2021 16:25, GordonD wrote:
    On 05/08/2021 22:18, Calvin Henry-Cotnam wrote:
    Speaking of her, didn't the actress (Lucy-Jo Hudson) used to be (or is
    still?) married to Alan Halsall (Tyrone)?


    They divorced in 2018.

    Alan Halsall is now with Tisha Merry, who used to play Steph Britton.

    Now that you mention it, I recall reading about that.

    --
    Calvin Henry-Cotnam
    "Unusual or extreme reactions to events caused by negligence
    are imaginable, but not reasonably foreseeable"
    - Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin, May 2008

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From MartinS@21:1/5 to James Heaton on Wed Sep 8 18:28:47 2021
    "James Heaton" <heatonandmoore@gmail.com.invalid> wrote:
    "kat" <littlelionne@hotmail.com> wrote...
    On 02/08/2021 12:41, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    I wondered why they wouldn't get her that gizmo that they put on the
    arm then she just holds her phone to it and it tells her what her
    levels are and the correct dosage of insulin she needs. A friend
    has one and says she has never felt so good as she does now, likely
    because even after all these years she got casual about it.

    Availability on the NHS maybe, or the cost?

    The former - apparently it's only available to T1 pregnant women,
    anyone who has disabling hypos, or anyone who has to test 8+ times a
    day.

    I have one of those gizmos - they are available by doctor's prescription in Canada. However, the sensors are pretty expensive if you're under 65 and
    don't have insurance coverage. As a senior, I pay $4.11 for 6 (a 90-day supply). It certainly beats doing fingersticks several times a day.

    --
    Martin S

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  • From Lucretia Borgia@21:1/5 to All on Wed Sep 8 19:37:39 2021
    On Wed, 08 Sep 2021 18:28:47 -0400, MartinS <me@my.place.invalid>
    wrote:

    "James Heaton" <heatonandmoore@gmail.com.invalid> wrote:
    "kat" <littlelionne@hotmail.com> wrote...
    On 02/08/2021 12:41, Lucretia Borgia wrote:
    I wondered why they wouldn't get her that gizmo that they put on the
    arm then she just holds her phone to it and it tells her what her
    levels are and the correct dosage of insulin she needs. A friend
    has one and says she has never felt so good as she does now, likely
    because even after all these years she got casual about it.

    Availability on the NHS maybe, or the cost?

    The former - apparently it's only available to T1 pregnant women,
    anyone who has disabling hypos, or anyone who has to test 8+ times a
    day.

    I have one of those gizmos - they are available by doctor's prescription in >Canada. However, the sensors are pretty expensive if you're under 65 and >don't have insurance coverage. As a senior, I pay $4.11 for 6 (a 90-day >supply). It certainly beats doing fingersticks several times a day.

    My friend loves hers, wishes they were invented years ago.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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