Northerner
Admin (Retired)
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
When Kate Miller started at university and rapidly lost weight, she thought the change in her lifestyle was most likely to blame.
'I'd gone from enjoying healthy home-cooked food living at home with my parents to living a typical student's life in Leeds - going out five nights a week and surviving on takeaways and pot noodles,' she recalls.
But that Christmas, with Kate having dropped from 8 st to 6 st (she is 5ft 3in), her friends and family began to fear she was in the grip of an eating disorder.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/a...amily-thought-anorexic-actually-diabetes.html
'I'd gone from enjoying healthy home-cooked food living at home with my parents to living a typical student's life in Leeds - going out five nights a week and surviving on takeaways and pot noodles,' she recalls.
But that Christmas, with Kate having dropped from 8 st to 6 st (she is 5ft 3in), her friends and family began to fear she was in the grip of an eating disorder.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/a...amily-thought-anorexic-actually-diabetes.html