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SUGAR HAPPY: Your Personal Diabetes Health Guide in Achieving Your Best Blood Sugars and Letting Go of Your Diabetes Complication Fears
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About this ebook
A thought-provoking, yet interesting question: can managing your blood sugar be as simple as what you don’t know? I think so.
As a daughter, sister and wife of family members living with type 2 and type 1 diabetes, I want to share with you what I have learned not only as a family member living with diabetes, but as a columnist diabet
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 22, 2018
ISBN9781732347717
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SUGAR HAPPY - Nadia Al-Samarrie
DEDICATION
Without my mother
Without my brother
Without my aunt
Without my grandmothers
Before I knew I would lose them to diabetes, I was their advocate.
I hope this book will inspire you to do your personal best in delaying or preventing diabetes complications.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
SUGAR HAPPY
DEDICATION
INTRODUCTION: WHY DIABETES IS OVERWHELMING
CHAPTER 1: UNDERSTANDING DIABETES
CHAPTER 2: FEARING DIABETES
CHAPTER 3: UNDERSTANDING HOW MEDICATION WORKS OR EACH MEDICATION WORKS?
CHAPTER 4: WHY MAINTAINING NORMAL BLOOD SUGARS IS IMPORTANT TO YOUR HOLISTIC HEALTH TO AVOID COMPLICATIONS
CHAPTER 5: UNDERSTANDING HOW DIABETES MEDICAL DEVICE FEEDBACK IS BENEFICIAL TO ADJUSTING YOUR BLOOD SUGARS
CHAPTER 6: AND WHAT AFFECTS YOUR INABILITY TO MAINTAIN NORMAL BLOOD SUGARS
CHAPTER 7: TOOLS TO HELP YOU ACHIEVE YOUR TARGET BLOOD SUGAR READINGS
CHAPTER 8: UNDERSTANDING THE PSYCHOSOCIAL ASPECT OF DIABETES
CHAPTER 9: OBSTACLES THAT MAY PREVENT YOU FROM ACHIEVING SUCCESS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS AND THANK YOU
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
THANK YOU
REFERENCES
INTRODUCTION
WHY DIABETES IS OVERWHELMING
What I have learned over the last 28 years is that no matter how educated you are, being diabetes literate makes a difference.
My former husband is a person with type 1 who was diagnosed with diabetes at the age of 17. He knew a lot about his disease. He understood how food affected him, how much insulin he needed to take, what type of inulin to take, and when to take it.
In contrast to my former husband are my grandmothers, my mother, my brother, and my aunt, Grace. They all had type 2 diabetes.
One of my grandmothers was an Iraqi I knew very well. The other was an American who I knew briefly as a child before she passed away, but I enjoyed her company. My mother, my brother, and my aunt and I were close and I can tell you they all were knowledgeable about many things in life. However, when they were diagnosed with diabetes, I could not understand what my mother, brother, and aunt did not get about the impact of this disease. This of course was greatly influenced by my former husband who taught me a lot about diabetes over a two-year period before we were married. He had started injecting insulin at 17. I met him when he was 28.
My mother had thyroid issues, high cholesterol, and high blood pressure. So, what was adding diabetes to her cluster of diseases? At the time, it seemed like all she had to do was take another pill and she would be fine.
Unfortunately, at the age of 65, after having type 2 diabetes for only 13 years, she passed away from diabetes complications. She did not do everything she could have done to manage her diabetes, because she did not get what she did not understand about diabetes and the domino effect that lack of understanding would have on her health. Her denial became her demise because she viewed the daily management of her disease as being good or bad that day. She believed tomorrow was going to be a different day. In most cases, it was not.
My brother, Jamal, was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes at the age of 40. I didn’t know he had diabetes until he came to visit us in the U.S. for his 50th birthday. Jamal as a young kid was a super athlete. In high school, he was a charmer; the girls called him Don Juan. His grades in class were either F’s or A’s, never in between. He could sit down, listen to a song on the radio, then play it on our piano without ever having taken a piano lesson. He also had a photographic memory. My siblings and I agreed hands down that he could have been a rocket scientist if he wanted to. He lived in Australia and had excellent medical care. When I saw him on his last visit to the U.S., he looked gaunt, walked slowly, and had not slept through the night in years.
I taught Jamal how to manage his blood sugars and explained that if he was going to the bathroom three times throughout the evening, it could be because of high blood sugars. He got a glucose meter to test this theory. He learned about carbohydrate counting and we found him a physician who put him on insulin. When he left the U.S. a month later, he had a skip in his walk. In fact, he called me from the airport to thank me for helping him figure out what he needed to do.
Aunt Grace, a type 2 whom I loved dearly, was another brilliant person. She was at my birth in Baghdad, and we share the same birthday. She had two master’s degrees from Berkeley and was exceptionally well-read. But when she was at my mother’s memorial, she did not look good. I asked her to check her blood sugar reading. She took it, and to our surprise, her blood sugar was 6oo milligrams per deciliter. The normal range before eating is 70 to 130 milligrams per deciliter. A blood sugar reading of 600 can send some people to the hospital. I asked her if she had insulin. She said yes. I then asked how her healthcare team instructed her to take insulin and said she needed to do that now to bring her blood sugar down. She took 12 units of regular insulin and waited a few hours. She checked her blood sugars again and it was still 600 milligrams per deciliter. Feeling concerned, knowing that she lived alone, I insisted that she stay at my house until her blood sugars came down sustainably. After four hours, she was well enough to leave. I asked her to see her doctor again because he might consider putting her on basal insulin. Basal insulin is a long-acting insulin that acts as background insulin in between meals, including fasting to help manage your blood sugar.
My grandmother in Baghdad also had type 2 diabetes. Her therapy was using Sweet’n Low in her tea. She ate chocolates, privately smoked cigarettes, had excess weight, and did not understand how food affected her blood sugar because no one taught her. This was back in the late 70’s. There was not much in diabetes education back then nor a community to learn from.
What do all these people have in common? They did not understand their diabetes and how it affected them. Food, stress, grief, illness, medication, medical devices, managing blood sugars, sleep, planning travel, holiday, and family parties. There are so many variables that can impact your blood sugar.
My diabetes family has been a significant influence in my life. So many people whom I loved, regardless of their educational background, never became diabetes literate. They never learned how different foods, exercise, or checking their blood sugars affected them. They assumed at their diagnosis, because their physician had given them a prescription, that the pill would take care of everything. They then resumed their lives with type 2 diabetes but with no lifestyle changes.
After meeting my former husband, who had already been living with type 1 for 11 years, I learned so much from him. He made managing his diabetes look easy. You eat, you take insulin, you check your blood sugar, and you exercise. That supposed ease frustrated my mother, who had type 2, to no avail. She struggled with her diabetes because, again, she did not know what she did not know. At the end of her life, she got it. However, unfortunately, this was too late.
After getting married and working corporate jobs, both my husband and I decided we were not corporate people. We opened a diabetes mail order store in San Francisco with the idea of moving to the country and raising a family someday. The business grew quickly in San Francisco. Six months into it, we found ourselves producing and hosting a diabetes radio show where luminaries specialists in diabetes care participated in our live radio talk show. Listeners could call in and ask a question. Shortly after we started the radio show, listeners called us and asked if we could transcribe the shows. In less than two years, we had a mail order business, a radio show, and a magazine.
For the next six years, I spoke with people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes; parents of children with diabetes; and pregnant women who were diagnosed with gestational diabetes. I learned so much in those six years. Plus, I was on my own emotional roller coaster with my mother, fearing her diabetes complications. Finally, I came to the realization that there was nothing I could do to help her if she was not willing to be diabetes literate. The mental games she played with herself exhausted me but has served as my greatest inspiration.
My family, friends, former husband, Sugar Happy Diabetes Supplies customers, DiabetesHealth.Com subscribers, podcast guests, video interviews, and the inquiries that pour in from my AskNadia column are my collective inspiration for this book. Their shared success and concerns can now be your inspiration in creating a realistic change in your diabetes self-management. Adversely, like my mother, aunt, and brother, their stories can also be a cautionary tale as to the pitfalls of a lack of diabetes literacy.
This book, Sugar Happy, will help family members, parents, grandparents, and employers to understand the complexity of living with diabetes. My advice to you, as someone offering support, is do not oversimplify what you think the person is feeling nor tell them what they should or should not do. Until you are diagnosed with diabetes, simply offer to be a support system with their permission. Do not police the person living with diabetes. They are already doing it to themselves regardless of what you may perceive. Unless you are living with a metabolic disorder, you likely have no idea how the disease can impact the person living with diabetes.
This book will also illuminate living with a pre-diabetes diagnosis, as it lays out the psychological, biological, and treatment for diabetes. I believe if people with a pre-diabetes diagnosis really understood how complex the disease can be, more effort would be put in preventing a diabetes diagnosis. There is no cure for type 2 diabetes. The only way out from delaying or preventing a diagnosis is by making the lifestyle changes required to achieve better health.
CHAPTER 1
UNDERSTANDING DIABETES
Diabetes in your family tree does not guarantee a diagnosis.
However, if you have an unhealthy lifestyle or a genetic predisposition to it, a diagnosis is still possible.
My great-grandmother, both my grandmothers, mother, brother, and aunt all had diabetes. There was a time in their lives during their pre-diabetes phase when their glucose levels were higher than normal, giving them the opportunity to adjust their lifestyles. They could have possibly delayed or prevented a diabetes diagnosis.
Growing up, I thought medication was all that was needed to manage diabetes. But as I grew older, I learned a lot more about my family’s predisposition to diabetes and what was really needed to successfully manage it. Consequently, when I take my annual glucose test and A1c test, if my blood glucose results are a bit elevated from the previous year or near the pre-diabetes range, I adjust my diet and start exercising more to delay or avert my diagnosis. After making dietary changes, my next glucose test always reads at a lower A1c showing me that my little lifestyle changes help in lowering my blood sugar level.
What is Diabetes?
Diabetes is when your pancreas does not make enough insulin or your body does not sufficiently use the insulin manufactured. When you eat certain food and drinks, they turn into sugar in your bloodstream. You cannot have high levels of sugar floating in your blood without it affecting your overall health. Sugar binds to proteins, making your arteries look like turkey jerky. This condition can impede blood flow and be dangerous to your health.
So, our smart organ the pancreas releases insulin, which is the key to converting the glucose from your bloodstream to energy in your cells. Now your cells will either use the energy or store it, stabilizing your blood sugar with the right amount of insulin. But if you have diabetes, there is a disruption in this process. Why? You could be insulin-resistant (i.e., your blood cells are unable to use your insulin effectively, which can lead to high blood sugar), not produce enough insulin, or have another condition affecting the process.
Some people have other conditions that may contribute to their diabetes diagnosis, such as sickle cell disease, thyroid dysfunction, being pregnant, or using medications that can increase blood sugar, such as steroids or some cholesterol medications, thus increasing the risk of a diabetes diagnosis.
You Are Not Alone
The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases estimated that 84.1 million people in the United States have pre-diabetes, which is a staggering 25.5% of the U.S. population for adults who are 18 or over.
If you have been diagnosed with diabetes, then you are one of the 23.1
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