Sunday, March 17, 2013

Staycation 2013

This past week Doug took off for my Spring Break. We didn't go anywhere overnight, just stayed home.

Well, as much as our family stays home. You'll soon learn (if you haven't already) that we're an On The Go Family. Monday we went to the Massanutten Water Park (although, looking at the link it says it's always 84 in there, um, I was cold!). The kids had a blast in the "Crazy River" (ie, Lazy River" and we LOVED that it had double tubes where one had a bottom the kids could sit in! SO much better than other places we've been where we've had to finagle the kids on our laps or hold them on the tube. 10000 Thumbs up on that, Massanutten!! Ollie did a bunch of slides on his own, both kids loved swimming in the pool area. We can't wait to go back this summer! Too bad it won't be as un-crowded as it was last week - there was minimal waiting for everything except the big adult tube slides! What, you thought Diabetes would slow us down? Heck no!

Wednesday was our first Endocrine follow up appointment. The day started with us having to wake him up early (bad juju 1), him not eat all of his breakfast (bad juju 2) and him fall asleep during the appointment (actually not bad). His BS was 125 (even without eating all his cereal!) and his A1C was 10.4 - I was mistakenly told 9.8 in the hospital it was actually 11.8 - sliiiight difference, eh?? We were told we're doing excellently with pretty much everything. The dietician was happily surprised to see we have a log book of everything he's eaten since he was diagnosed (although, this week it hasn't been 100% accurate, oops). The attending Dr was nice, although he told us to not give him so many cheese sticks after the initial period.. I'm still scratching my head over that one.  Good news: We were told that if Ollie's numbers continue to be normal over night we can drop at least one check soon! They were going to tell us to drop one at the appointment, but he'd been having some lows overnight that week. We changed his dinner carb ratio and his Lantus dose. We also got a Lantus pen (instead of a vial of meds with a syringe). It has its pros and cons - pros, it's more accurate dosing, it's easy to use, nice to have 2 different systems (the Humalog is still vial/syringe) so they don't get confused, you can't get bubbles in it. Cons, however - it can't do half units and there's some leak back we're dealing with (leak back is when you pull the needle out, there's a bubble of med on the skin, so he didn't get the whole dose). All in all, I really like it! I wish we could have both be pens, but we really need the half unit of Humalog right now.

The rest of the week was quieter (well, minus Emi chirping "Wadoo pack??"[water park?] every once in a while. Happily, we correctly bolused for a breakfast buffet, pizza and a piece of cake. No, that wasn't one meal :P Olliver is starting to slow down on eating. He's starting to not scarf everything on his plate and then some. He's also not always begging for snacks right after a meal. Doug and I were talking yesterday - we're both getting better at being able to tell when his sugar is out of whack. We've had several lows this week - and Ollie can tell, too. He's pretty good at telling us to check his finger, or ask for his "green bag" (his meter and supplies are in a camo type bag).

I know I've said it before, and I'm sure I'll say it again.. however, Ollie is doing amazing. We tested sugar at the water park, we gave an injection in Panera, we tested his sugar in the car... he hardly complains (especially for a cranky 4 yr old who doesn't know really what's going on!). I know it sucks for him, it does for all of us! But we're getting a routine (he likes to use the alcohol wipe himself, pick where we're injecting/testing, he likes to check the needle to make sure it's there, he likes to see the medicine in the syringe, etc) and it's working.

3 comments:

  1. It's really interesting to see the different management style with Ollie and my friend's daughter. Her BS has been amazing since she left the hospital, but they are still doing 2 nightly checks, and she doesn't have a pen for her Lantas. I don't think she had the same follow up either.

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    1. Most kids have a good honeymoon period after diagnosis. The injected insulin helps the pancreas realize it needs to produce insulin, so they have a period of good BS.. Ollie doesn't really have a honeymoon I don't think... Or it's a rocky one.

      The pen is because of our insurance. We had the syringe/vial from the hospital, bu our insurance didn't want us to use lantis, they wanted us to use levimir - which is q12h, not once a day. We had to argue with them and thy approved the pen for whatever reason.

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    2. Where is her Ped Endo located?

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