
Sunday, November 14, 2010
It's World Diabetes Day - So Wave Your Diabetes Freak Flag & Spread The Gospel According To D!

Saturday, November 13, 2010
On A New York Bound Train
To go & see what I can see.
Meeting up with diabetes friends
at New York's Historical Society,
To view first hand the big exhibit on insulin's famous discovery.
Doctors Banting & Best's gift changed the world in oh, so many ways.
Giving life to us all, including that little girl, whose become the woman whose post your reading today!
The next stop is Trenton
And then Penn Station,
But what about the cure?
Will the day ever come when we can finally say: we don't have diabetes anymore?
Friday, November 12, 2010
So, How Are You Going To Keep The WDD Momentum Going?
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Talking With Jeff Hitchcock Of ChildrenwithDiabetes
This past summer at second Roche/Diabetes Social Media Summit, I had the opportunity to see Jeff in his element, running The Children With Diabetes Friends For Life Conference in Orlando, Florida and I learned that not only was he was a smart guy, but he also had a big heart.
Jeff was more than busy overseeing CWD, but he took it all in stride, and never hesitated to stop what he was doing to talk with CWD families. I watched him as he had conversations with CWDs of all shapes in sizes and I was amazed that he seemed to know all the kids by name - and I'm talking hundreds of children!
He asked them about life and school and what was new in their worlds & called them by name as he passed them in the hall. And I have to say, that’s what really impressed me about him.
Last month I interviewed Jeff via email about CWD, and I hope you like it!
FULL DISCLOSURE: I drank the CWD Kool-aid this past summer and became a convert. Seriously, I can’t wait to go back to Diabetes Land!

CWD founder & President, Jeff Hitchcock at the 2009 CWD Friends for Life UK conference.
What are the three main reasons that you started CWD way back when, in 1995?
I’m not sure there were three reasons. I had been interested in starting a diabetes support web site since I first got access to the web in the fall of 1994. I found myself laid off in June 1995 and that seemed a good day to launch CWD, which is exactly what I did. Initially, the site had a page about my daughter Marissa and a couple of other pages, but I don’t recall exactly what. I hoped that Marissa would meet other kids through her page, and that my wife Brenda and I could share our experiences with other parents.
Did you ever think that CWD would become what it has?
No, I certainly had no idea that CWD would grow to become what it is today. I really had no plan other than to create a web site and learn about the web.
I know that CWD was purchased by Johnson & Johnson in 2008. How has becoming part of J & J changed CWD? What would you like to tell people who might worry about Pharma’s influence on CWD?
The key reason to accept J&J’s acquisition offer was to enable CWD to grow, both online and at our conferences. We had plans to expand our staff, rebuild our web infrastructure to take advantage of the new and evolving social networking tools, and reach families living in Canada and the UK through new conferences there. We succeeded in bringing the Friends for Life experience to Canada and the UK. We’re still working on the web part.
To answer your second question, the many companies involved in type 1 diabetes make it possible for CWD to exist. This has always been the case. Without online advertising and conference sponsorships, Children with Diabetes would not be here. As for influence, I have always let the science guide me. For example, CWD is a big proponent of insulin pumps. Why? Because the science shows clear metabolic and psychosocial benefits.
Some might say, “But you’re part of an organization that sells insulin pumps. Of course you support pumps!” But they would be wrong. We support pumps because of the science. The same goes for insulin analogs, frequent glucose monitoring, and continuous sensors. We let the science guide us. And while we promote therapies, we are agnostic about brands – for example, we support pump therapy, but not a particular pump brand.
You’re responsible for creating an event/org that’s given thousands of children & their families the opportunity to experience what life is like in “Diabetes Land.” And from what I’ve read & seen first-hand, sometimes it’s the first time many of the families in attendance have ever met others who live with diabetes 24 X7. I’ve been told that life long bonds and friendships are formed at CWD. What’s it been like to watch these families and their children come together with others year after year?
The friendships that have come from our conferences, especially our annual Friends for Life conferences, have been truly amazing. I think what surprised me the most was seeing kids with type 1 who had never met becoming such intense friends almost immediately. These kids (as well as adults) share something – life with type 1 – that transcends distance and age in a way that I never fully appreciated.
Many CWD kids and adults are closer to their CWD buddies than they are with their best friends at home. It was completely unexpected, and is completely wonderful.
What’s it like to watch a new family experience CWD for the first time? Is there a metamorphosis of sorts?
There are two ways to experience CWD: online and a conference. Most people experience CWD first online. Typically, their child has just been diagnosed. They’ve learned about insulin, injections, and glucose monitoring but are still in shock.
They find in CWD the comforting voices of moms and dads who’ve been there and can help guide them in their journey from the shock of diagnosis to the confidence required to care for a child with diabetes.
We see a similar evolution at our conferences. On their first day, families new to Friends for Life, for example, can feel overwhelmed at the sheer size of the event. By the end of the conference, these new families have changed – they’re easily navigating sessions and the exhibit hall and the social events. Many families return the next year, and by the third year, these families have the confidence to become volunteers at the conference, helping new families. It’s an amazing experience.
I worry that some CWDs aren’t actively participating in their disease because of their parents’ fears. As a former CWD, who grew up with two type 1 siblings and who lost a sister to type 1 at an early age, I understand parental fears because I saw how diabetes affected my parents first hand. But I'm concerned that if children aren’t given the opportunity to actively work with & participate with their parents as a team re: their diabetes, growing up and transitioning into independent adults living successful lives with type 1 will be extremely difficult.
Owning your diabetes is hard enough, but when you've never been allowed to actually take part in your diabetes - it can become a huge obstacle!
What are your thoughts?
And as a parent of a former CWD who is now living as an adult type 1, what advice would you feel comfortable sharing with other parents on that subject?
As a parent, our primary goal for our children is to shepherd them safely into adulthood. For us parents of kids with type 1, we have an additional responsibility – to help our children to become healthy adults living with type 1. As such, we have an obligation to involve our kids in their care to the extent possible. The level of involvement varies by age (chronological and emotional), but in the end, it’s our kids who have diabetes, not us parents, and their success as an adult with type 1 hinges in large part on how well we transition responsibility to them as they mature.
So I’m in complete agreement with you. With that said, there is no single way to achieve this goal. Different families will find their own way. At CWD, we work very hard with each all of our kids, from pre-school to college, to teach them best practices and to provide an environment in which they can find great education and emotional support to help them on their journey.
Does CWD offer scholarships for families to attend, and if so how would a family go about applying for a CWD scholarship?
The Diabetes Scholars Foundation (www.diabetesscholars.org) provides scholarships for families and adults with type 1 to attend CWD conferences. They also fund college scholarships for young people with type 1 diabetes.
Jeff, I know that in 2010, there’s been a lot of discussion about bringing more adults with type 1 into the Children With Diabetes Friends For Life 2011 Florida Conference, and I’m all for that! I think I know that answer, but I'm going to ask anyway! What’s your reasoning behind opening up CWDFFL to adults with type 1 and what can adults with type 1 expect from CWDFFL in 2011, both at your national & international conferences?
When I started CWD, my daughter Marissa was eight years old. She is now 23, living in Florida and working as a nurse. From a very personal perspective, I’m interested in making a difference for adults with type 1, since my “child” with diabetes is now an adult. Also, and equally important, as Friends for Life has grown, more and more adults with type 1 have come. We have to ensure that the programming at Friends for Life meets the needs of everyone who attends, and that includes adults with type 1.
Besides the fact that CWD is adding more adult type 1 related activities, what else will 2011 hold for CWDFFL ?
In addition to the new programming for adults with type 1, new for 2011 will be a teen driving clinic, which will offer CWD teen drivers advanced accident avoidance training to help reduce their risk of crashing. Teens already have a higher risk of accidents than older drivers, and people with type 1 diabetes who have tight control (A1c under 6.9) also have a higher risk for accidents. The teen driving clinic has been shown to reduce accident rates among its graduates by over 70%, which will help our CWD teens learn to drive better and safer – and to understand why it’s so important to check their blood sugar every time they get behind the wheel.
Anything else that you consider “diabetesalcious” that you’d like to share with us?
Very simply, I consider myself very fortunate to have met so many wonderful people in the world of diabetes. It’s a club we’d all rather not have joined, but once in, it’s nice to have discovered that the members can be quite amazing.
Jeff, thanks for taking the time to answer my questions!
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
So, I Got A Call From The Onion This Morning......
This is not the post I originally had scheduled this morning – but sometimes, shit happens.
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So I just got off the phone with Ann Finn, PR Manager For TheOnion.com who was calling on behalf of The Onion’s Editor Joe Randazzo.
I left Joe a voicemail on Sunday, when I was steaming mad and eyeball deep in writing my Open Letter To The Onion Editor Post re: The Onion’s not so funny article about children with diabetes dying.
I know for a fact I didn’t sound like my normal, sweet and sunny self. As a matter of fact, I’m sure I sounded like a bitch on wheels- and I’m totally OK with that.
Anyway, Anne told me that Sunday's article was satirical - like everything else they write/post/film at The Onion.
And that no person or group is off limits to their satire, regardless or race; religion, sex, political affiliation,etc. - Yada, yada, yada.
I told her that Of course I knew the article was satirical. I even told her that I loved The Onion, as do so many in our diabetes community, but that we still found the article incredibly offensive.
And then I told her why:
A. It crossed the line.
B. It wasn’t even funny or well written, even if you took the diabetes out of the mix.
C. Nobody makes fun of diabetes more than a person with diabetes -that's how we deal with living with diabetes, but this article was HORRIBLE.
D. That diabetes is a totally misunderstood disease and that an article like the one they wrote, even if done in satire, still pushes the diabetes stereotypes & myths forward.
E. That people with diabetes are always being blamed for their disease and that parent of children with diabetes were kicked to the curb when they spoke up on The Onion’s FB page. People said horrible things to them, saying they gave their children to much sugar, that they were idiots and to sensitive, etc.
F. The article’s timing was lousy, considering November is National Diabetes Month and Sunday is World Diabetes Day .
G. That our community has lost 3 children and one adult to Dead In Bed syndrome since February so the whole PWDs dying thing just isn't funny to us.
H. And the next time The Onion decides to write about a disease on a satirical level, they might want to do a little research on the disease and make sure you know, they aren’t writing about said disease during it’s national awareness month.
Anyway, Anne told me that her father was a PWD and that satire is satire, but that she and Joe wanted me to know that they understood that I was upset, but wanted to make sure that they (and their readers) know that it was written a satirical level.
Anne did her job as a PR Manager; she reached out to the offended party (which I appreciate) and stood by her employer, never wavering and never admitting wrong doing, which is her job after all.
But I still wasn’t thrilled.
So I told her that I would be forwarding her name and email address to someone who was planning a fundraiser in their child’s memory and who had reached out to The Onion, but hadn't heard back - I won’t say who because I haven’t received approval from her to do so yet and I want to get this post up and running. And that maybe The Onion could help make things right by donating to/ or be a sponsor of the fundraiser.
So now, let’s hope they do.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
It's My 3rd Blogiversary & Here Are 6th Things I Want You To Know About Diabetes On D-Blog Day!

I can’t believe that the blog is 3 years old!! It’s seems like only yesterday when I wrote my first post and was a raving & ranting lunatic about The Berry weaning herself off insulin!
When I started, I had no idea what I was doing, or that there was such a huge (and awesome) Diabetes On-line Community. I just needed a place to vent and I’d heard rumblings about this thing called “A Blog.” And the fact that setting up a blog was so darn easy, I took the plunge! I didn't have much on-line etiquette at first, and it took me a while to discover the DOC, but I'm still here - and loving every minute of it!
Blogging about diabetes has given me a community, reignited my diabetes passion to inform and educate others about living life with diabetes, and it's steered my career in a Diabetes centric direction and focus.
I'm still not always quite sure what I’m doing, but I do know that whatever I'm doing, I'm doing so with a passion and I’m so grateful to be part of such a fantastical and powerful community!
Over the past three years I’ve learned so much from others regarding both diabetes and life. Blogging has made me a better person, a healthier person with diabetes, and blogging has enhanced my writing skills. Diabetes Blogging has also made my voice louder than I ever thought possible! Which is pretty damn loud considering that I have quite a set of lungs!
So thanks for reading, supporting, giving me your shoulder to cry on when needed, always making me laugh, and continuing to teach me something new every day.
And thank you for making me strive to be better and achieve more in every aspect of my life.
I love you guys so much!
BTW, I just read that Rachel over at Tales Of Rachel is celebrating her Blogaversary today too! 5 years of blogging - OUTSTANDING! So go on over there and wish her a Happy Blogaversary!
Today is the 6th annual D-Blog Day - I kid you not! Gina created D-Blog Day in order to unite all the diabetes bloggers and to educate the public about diabetes, during National Diabetes Month! Good job Gina!
This years D-Blog Day theme is: 6 Things I want you To Know About Diabetes.
- Diabetes is NOT a character flaw. While it’s true that many characters have diabetes, including myself. Being a person with diabetes doesn't make you a bad person, a terrible judge of character, a lazy sugar addict, or person who lacks quality.
- Being a person with diabetes does not make me weaker or less capable of working and living a full life. Yes, there are times when diabetes makes me feel like crap, but that doesn’t make me any less capable- on the contrary, it makes me more determined then ever to do a great job and live a great life!
- Don’t ask a person with diabetes “Are you sure your allowed to eat that?” because like the rest of the population – we can pretty much anything – in moderation. Seriously, I don’t know many people over the age of 30 who can eat whatever they want, so stop judging us on what we put in our mouths. Instead, why not ask: Is your diet restricted because of diabetes? OR I’m totally confused by what a person with diabetes can or can’t eat. Can you explain it to me?
- As a person living with diabetes, I’m constantly doing Diabetes Math and calculating the carbs of every scrap of food I put into my body so I can figure out how much insulin to take to cover that food. This makes me good at multi-tasking. Not because I want to be, but because I have to be. So next time you and I are out to dinner and we’re deep in conversation, keep in mind that I will secretly be eyeballing and calculating carbs while gushing over your child’s baby pics or laughing at your last nightmare blind date!
- There is NO CURE FOR DIABETES. Yes, insulin allows me to live, but insulin is not a cure. I’m alive because of insulin, but if I don’t take my insulin, I’m dead, “sleeping with the fishes,” Je suis morte, & fini. And even with insulin, I'm still at risk for all type of diabetes complications.
- Finally, If you have any questions about diabetes, don’t be afraid to ask, because that’s what I’m here for! After 33 years of living with type 1 diabetes, I know a thing a two about the subject! And in all honesty, I’d rather you ask a diabetes question then continue to perpetuate diabetes myths or stereotypes!
Monday, November 8, 2010
Get Bent? Nope, I'm Impressed!
So part of being a person with diabetes who wears an insulin pump is that your infusion sets and infusion sites have their own issues and idiosyncrasies. Sometimes infusion sets get kinked or the tubing gets knotted or ripped out during "vigorous" activity or doorknobs.
Other times, Infusion Set Nirvana sets in and you don't want change your site because your infusion is working so perfectly - which ironically, was the case with the two infusion sets above.
Both sets delivered the insulin just fine (more than just fine - my were numbers were fabulous,) both sets had no problems with absorption, and both sets stayed on for three days each.
And both cannula's look like they had the sh*t kicked out of them!
I thought the first set was just a one a million super hero cannula that could take a licking on keep on ticking. I figured the tubing had been pulled because of my insulin pump clip on my pants and caused the cannula to look a bit funky.
When I saw the second one a few weeks laterI started laughing again, because once again- as funky as the cannula looked, it rocked the insulin delivery.
I've come to the conclusion that it's not about how something looks. Because in the end, it's really about how that something works for you.
And those infusion sets worked performed delivering insulin on my thigh sites like rockstars - so there's no need for me to "get bent!"
On the contrary I'm pretty damn impressed!