Northerner
Admin (Retired)
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
Marisa Baker has to check on her daughter every two hours, even in the middle of the night, because of her diabetes – but technological advancements are helping, says Nick Duerden
On holiday in Portugal five years ago, Marisa Baker, a lawyer from Surrey, became concerned when her youngest daughter, Elouisa, began to display a set of curious symptoms. “She was very thirsty, she kept falling over, and was wetting herself,” Baker says. Given that Elouisa was just three years old and only recently potty trained, her mother wasn’t overly concerned. But, she says, “she somehow just wasn’t herself.”
A doctor checked her blood sugar levels, which were so high that he expressed surprise Elouisa wasn’t already in a coma. Diagnosing Type 1 Diabetes, he referred her to the nearest hospital before she was transferred back to the UK, where the lives of the Bakers changed abruptly, and irrevocably. Marisa is no longer a lawyer but now works as her daughter’s full-time carer.
https://inews.co.uk/essentials/life...n-with-diabetes-and-demands-on-their-parents/
On holiday in Portugal five years ago, Marisa Baker, a lawyer from Surrey, became concerned when her youngest daughter, Elouisa, began to display a set of curious symptoms. “She was very thirsty, she kept falling over, and was wetting herself,” Baker says. Given that Elouisa was just three years old and only recently potty trained, her mother wasn’t overly concerned. But, she says, “she somehow just wasn’t herself.”
A doctor checked her blood sugar levels, which were so high that he expressed surprise Elouisa wasn’t already in a coma. Diagnosing Type 1 Diabetes, he referred her to the nearest hospital before she was transferred back to the UK, where the lives of the Bakers changed abruptly, and irrevocably. Marisa is no longer a lawyer but now works as her daughter’s full-time carer.
https://inews.co.uk/essentials/life...n-with-diabetes-and-demands-on-their-parents/