Sorry to hear about your kidneys and needing to be rushed into hospital.
I hope you are soon in the mend .
When flying keep your insulin in your hand luggage as if it goes in the hold it could freeze and tough though insulin is it can’t withstand being frozen. I would also keep as much of my diabetes gear in hand luggage too.
Their is a lot more info you need if flying, but I’ll leave that to others.
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@everydayupsanddowns has explained I am on a Basal / bolus (otherwise known as MDI regime).
Which I highly recommend as it is far more flexible than the mixed insulin, which you inject twice a day and have to eat to the insulin , ie a specified amount of carbohydrates at each meal, afaik you shouldn’t miss meals .
With MDI it means more injections but our insulin needles are so tiny and you normally don’t feel them at all.
You can miss meals .
You can eventually learn how many units you need for the amount of carbs you are going to eat. At first you’ll probably start out on fixed units and told how many carbs to eat.
I know this may all sound very complicated to you but honestly it soon becomes second nature and you’ll soon learn how to adjust the insulin units yourself.
You have a Basal (slow acting insulin) once or twice daily , this is to deal with the glucose your liver puts out between meals to fuel your body and brain.
The Bolus (Rapid) insulin for meals/ snacks. I normally now only eat breakfast and dinner so that’s two injections of bolus insulin, but if I am hungry I can inject again for some lunch.
If I am not hungry and don’t want that meal , I just miss out the bolus jab and all is well.
I hope the above helps.