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Historic building to become University Heights library?
I was born here in 1970. This building is part of my heritage and I think it is indeed one of the more attractive buildings. Take a look at the woodwork eaves, peek in the windows, then imagine it restored to it's full glory. It needs to stay. Who am I promoting? San Diego history.— February 7, 2015 9:59 p.m.
At 18 months old, he was one of the youngest people with type 1 diabetes in San Diego County
P.S. I do about equally well with MDIs, but then I have a steady and predictable schedule. The pump offers more freedom for schedule changes because the wearer isn't dealing with the long-acting arc.— January 14, 2015 10:23 p.m.
At 18 months old, he was one of the youngest people with type 1 diabetes in San Diego County
Thank you for trying to understand, David, but you still have several misconceptions. First, the pump is neither "good" nor "bad" - it is a tool for greater control, especially in communication with the CGM (Continuous Glucose Monitor). When using needles instead of a pump, long-acting insulin is an arc over the day while using short-acting to cover meals and high blood glucose, as opposed to the pump which delivers a small amount of short-acting continuously throughout the day, with manual-controls to deliver additional short acting to cover those carbohydrates and high glucose readings. Insulin can be injected into any fatty tissue such as the stomach, thighs, and upper arms. I do thighs and stomach. Some people prefer MDIs (Multiple Daily Injection), while others prefer the pump. I do MDIs. I've never heard of a T1 controlling with MDIs without the use of long-acting insulin, so I'm very confused by your statement. It makes no sense. I used a pump for about a year, I despised wearing a pager-sized and weighted device with a tube attached to my body. There is a cordless kind, but of course insurance won't cover that.— January 14, 2015 9:40 p.m.