KateXXXXXX
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Parent of person with diabetes
Just being nosy, really...
Who cares for your teenager? Is it the adult services or the children's?
At 16, my son is being cared for by the adult team, though we have been told that we can contact the kid's team at need. The GMNT is 6'1" and weighs 14 stone (AFTER losing 2 stone in a fortnight, prior to diagnosis!), and fairly mature for his age, so they put him under the adult team as they thought this would suits him better from the physiological point. Medway acknowledge that what is really needed is a sort of in between section for young adults to cover the 14-19 or so age group, but there's no funding or mechanism for setting one up.
He seems to be responding fine to being treated as an adult: there's a measure of independence there that I'm very reluctant to erode. But I do feel that some age appropriate advice would help him. The nurses all seem very on the ball with this, though it's a bit under the wire as there's no real official policy. We seem to be OK so far, but I was wondering how it worked in other areas and for other people... Given that every teenager/young adult is different, and every case of diabetes carefully tailored to be different each day for them all! 🙄
Who cares for your teenager? Is it the adult services or the children's?
At 16, my son is being cared for by the adult team, though we have been told that we can contact the kid's team at need. The GMNT is 6'1" and weighs 14 stone (AFTER losing 2 stone in a fortnight, prior to diagnosis!), and fairly mature for his age, so they put him under the adult team as they thought this would suits him better from the physiological point. Medway acknowledge that what is really needed is a sort of in between section for young adults to cover the 14-19 or so age group, but there's no funding or mechanism for setting one up.
He seems to be responding fine to being treated as an adult: there's a measure of independence there that I'm very reluctant to erode. But I do feel that some age appropriate advice would help him. The nurses all seem very on the ball with this, though it's a bit under the wire as there's no real official policy. We seem to be OK so far, but I was wondering how it worked in other areas and for other people... Given that every teenager/young adult is different, and every case of diabetes carefully tailored to be different each day for them all! 🙄