We’ve done a few posts before on diabetes and driving here at BeingDiabetic, and I had a reader suggest I do the below poll, which I thought was an interesting one.

If you have a topic for a poll you’d like me to put up, please contact me with your idea.

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When I was first diagnosed with T1 (well actually even now when people find out for the first time that I have it) there were a lot of questions around whether diabetes was in my family. I’ve heard differing statistics over the years about what percentage of us actually have diabetes in our genes, but it’s never as high as you might think.

I met up with a couple of other T1s the other day and we all discovered that each of us has a parent with Rheumatoid Arthritis (another autoimmune condition). Which brings me to my poll. (For a long list of autoimmune conditions, have a look here)

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Funny really. The newly diagnosed may nod along to this. When I was first diagnosed with T1, Mum would call out that dinner was half an hour away (those were the days of Actrapid, where you needed to give it half an hour’s head start) and I’d sit at the end of my bed with my prepped syringe trying to psych myself up to inject it in my stomach. There is no way I would ever forget a single injection.

Fast forward 14 years (this is two years ago but when I was still on MDI). I would constantly ask my husband if he’d seen me with my injection pen in my hand as I’d often take an injection on…

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I was perusing the annals of the internet last week and saw this article on Stuff.co.nz about how scientists have research indicating that fathers with high fat diets may be a cause of diabetes in their daughters?

You can read the full article here.

Seriously, I am all for research and understanding the causes and contributing factors behind T1 but come on, isn’t this a little ridiculous? It feels like there are all sorts of links between so many different conditions (white bread and cancer is one I hear often) and they just keep coming. Certainly, there are links between food and lifestyle which it is essential to know about for preventative measures but I…

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It’s not something that I’ve ever thought about much but the good ol’ Glucagon kits is a bit of a good thing really, isn’t it?

Everyone’s hypos are different and luckily I don’t loose the plot when I’m hypo (even when I’m really hypo) so I’ve only used mine once on myself and then one other time on a stranger on a tour bus.

What about you guys?

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