Very early days for you Daniel, so your body will still be adjusting to the fact that you are now getting a regular supply of insulin when it had previously been starved of it. The doses you are on are relatively crudely calculated in comparison to what a healthy pancreas would be giving out, so try not to think in terms of them being absolutely right for the food you are consuming. There are other factors that can affect the rate at which levels rise or fall, and you will become familiar with them in time, and with experience. The main thing you can do for now is to test regularly - not necessarily just when you feel low, but also in order to find out any patterns that might occur e.g. in relation to the time of day, what in articular you ate, what the weather is like, whether you have been exercising etc. No-one can give you an exact prediction of what will happen as this is a very individual thing and people can react differently, so the key is to test, test, test and find out how things apply to YOU
🙂 I'd suggest testing before and 1, 2 and 4 hours after eating initially. You won't need to do this forever, just whilst you look for those patterns. What insulin are you on? Most mealtime insulins (called 'bolus') can last 3-5 hours in your system, and I find personally that if my levels are nicely in range after 2 hours then I will need to eat something as my levels will otherwise drop much further over the next 2-3 hours.
Non-carb snacks like cheese or nuts are great if your levels are fine, and some people can manage a small snack like an apple or a biscuit (10-15g carbs) without injecting for it. If you are regularly dropping at certain times after eating then your insulin doses are probably too high and you need to discuss with your team how to adjust them - at this stage I would be very wary of relying on the Accuchek telling you what to do.
Finally, do please get hold of a copy of
Type 1 Diabetes in Children Adolescents and Young People by Ragnar Hanas. It's not cheap, but it covers all aspects of living with diabetes and will help you with many of the issues you are likely to encounter - it will also introduce you to many other things that you can look out for
🙂
Good luck, and keep asking questions - that's why we're here!
🙂