Do you know anything about insulin and diabetes, Anya?
Diabetics usually carry around insulin pens which contain enough for about a month's supply, depending on dosage. Therefore it will be unusual for it to run out on school premises. Pens do actually tell you how much there is left in them.
All that's needed is for the child to know exactly where it is kept.
Diabetics keep records themselves of how much and when, as well as blood sugar levels, so that will not be a problem. He just needs to be taught how to do it and what it means.
Whenever any of my grandchildren have needed privacy, they are taken into the teacher's toilet area, with a chair to sit on, etc. Not diabetic, but the principle is the same.
Injections these days can be given through clothing, into the stomach area or top of the leg or buttocks. Don't have to be, but they can.
There is no need these days for schools to be obstructive, whoever is doing the obstruction.
The idea these days is to try and make the diabetic child feel as if he is as normal as possible, not to make him feel unwanted.
🦞 The Lockdown Gang still chatting 🦞
What did you you think you would have by your current age that you don't?


that the little chap's family might have to remove him and his siblings if the school doesn't agree.