Students educate peers on diabetes and plight of their sister
On the occasion of Diabetes Awareness Month, two English Montreal School Board students are educating their peers about the disease as it relates to their little sister.
Raphaella is a student at Royal West Academy in Montreal West. Her sister Emmanuelle attends Merton Elementary School in Côte Saint-Luc. Over the next few weeks, they will be talking about the impact of diabetes on their family and the plight of their younger sister.
Dr. Preetha Krishnamoorthy, M.D.C.M, a Pediatric Endocrinologist at the Montreal Children’s Hospital, spoke to Raphaella’s Secondary I Science class on November 16 at Royal West. Teacher Andrea Dillon agreed that this was a wonderful example of authentic learning.
The preschooler was diagnosed in December 2016 with Type 1 diabetes at the age of 2. Type 1 (juvenile) diabetes is an autoimmune chronic disease. The team of dedicated health care professionals offered standardized training for her medical treatment. “At first, we managed daily and nightly insulin injections and capillary blood tests before meals,” said mom Michaella. “Diabetes management requires timely decision making and touches every aspect of a person’s lifestyle. The young sister has labile diabetes and Impaired Hypoglycaemia Awareness also known as “symptom unaware.” She displays and feels no symptoms such as fatigue, hunger, thirst, sweat, shakes and dizziness; such symptoms can prompt medical intervention to prevent and treat hypoglycaemia and hyperglycaemia. The two states, untreated can lead to seizures, unconsciousness and death.
“We received advice from parents in the USA and Israel on innovative treatment care for children with type 1
Since diagnosis, the preschooler has required no ambulatory or admission hospital care, as well as no glucagon injection; she was administered on two separate occasion overdoses of insulin as well as caught frequent colds,
The cost of Dexcom is completely out of pocket as RAMQ and private insurance
“Quebec children with Type 1 diabetes deserve to have treatment care that offers
Raphaella will be leading a charity project for her upcoming birthday. Finger puppets will be donated to the Children's Hospital diabetic clinic.