Your Child &
Diabetes: Learn What It Takes To Be A Responsible
Parent
What responsibilities does a parent have to take on when
they have discovered that there child has been diagnosed with
diabetes? Can you or your spouse handle the daily treatments
needed in order to keep your child on his medications?
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What educational tools must you look for so that you can
control the situation with ease and strength?
These are the questions that run through the minds of
thousands of parents every year who's children have high bllod
sugar levels. When the child is diagnosed with diabetes, the
entire family must take on a whole new role that was not
expected. This is especially true of the parents.
As a parent of a child diabetic, your role now is not just
that of a loving mother or father, you are now going to take on
the responsibilities of a part-time doctor and dietitian. In
other words, you have new tasks that lay ahead of you on a
daily basis.
Here are examples of the responsibilities you will have to
undertake now that your child has been diagnosed with high
blood sugar levels:
1. The first thing you'll need to do is to educate yourself
on the signs and symptoms of diabetic ketoacidosis,
hypoglycemia, and hyperglycemia. Just how to recognize these
symptoms is unique with every child. All kids have a different
way of expressing how they feel when their blood glucose is
either too high or too low. Some children become extremely
quiet, while others act out in loud shouting and crying.
2. You will now have two administer insulin shots to your
child on a daily basis. At first you will have to inject small
amounts of rapid acting insulin so that you can wait to find
out how much your child will eat. Once you get an understanding
of how much he or she eats at each meal, you can adjust the
insulin accordingly.
3. You will also have to learn how to measure your child's
blood glucose, as well as the urine ketones. It is essential to
take very frequent measurements of blood glucose. This way you
are stocked with as much information as possible to better
control hypoglycemia. In order to get total control, most kids
will need between three and seven measurements of blood glucose
per day.
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