Families want nurse or staff to monitor apps remotely in case of urgent alarms; schools cite shrinking budgets and internet issues ...
By Phil Galewitz for KFF Health News. Broadcast version by Trimmel Gomes for Florida News Connection reporting for the KFF Health News-Public News Service Collaboration Just a few years ago, children ...
Just a few years ago, children with Type 1 diabetes reported to the school nurse several times a day to get a finger pricked to check whether their blood sugar was dangerously high or low. This story ...
Living with Type 1 diabetes is a numbers game ... but for T1D patients, especially the kids who the disease so often impacts, all that tech can be a distraction. To solve that problem for his ...
though other staff can be trained to monitor CGMs. Caring for children with Type 1 diabetes is nothing new for schools. Before CGMs, there was no alarm that signaled a problem; instead ...
With continuous glucose monitors, students with Type 1 diabetes no longer have to visit the school nurse for a finger prick. But some parents say it falls to them to keep an eye on blood sugar levels ...
Living with Type 1 diabetes is a numbers game ... but for T1D patients, especially the kids who the disease so often impacts, all that tech can be a distraction. To solve that problem for his ...
Just a few years ago, children with Type 1 diabetes reported to the school nurse several times a day to get a finger pricked to check whether their blood sugar was dangerously high or low. The ...
For those monitoring glucose for general health, weight management, or fitness, a simpler device may be sufficient.” Some ...
though other staffers can be trained to monitor CGMs. Caring for children with Type 1 diabetes is nothing new for schools. Before CGMs, there was no alarm that signaled a problem; instead ...
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