Subscribe Now

[hb-subscribe]

Trending News

T1D Exchange T1D Exchange T1D Exchange
  • Activity
    • 4 seconds ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Have you ever been told you couldn’t physically do something because you live with diabetes?
      Maybe not a physical restriction, but decades ago I was told I was ineligible to get a pilot’s license.
    • 17 seconds ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Have you ever been told you couldn’t physically do something because you live with diabetes?
      Yes. It had to do with a job that required me to drive delivery vans to clean and park them on the company's lot.
    • 31 seconds ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Have you ever been told you couldn’t physically do something because you live with diabetes?
      Long time ago - told there were certain occupations I would not be allowed to do because if T1D. Pilot, air traffic controller, military, etc.
    • 13 hours, 12 minutes ago
      Patricia Dalrymple likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      Being at high risk for dementia (both genetic and behavioral) and at an advanced age while still making very complex decisions about pump, CGM, and data issues Phew! What a premise! Is the optimal strategy for T1D management most likely to be MDI by caregivers in assisted living?
    • 14 hours, 25 minutes ago
      lis be likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      Being at high risk for dementia (both genetic and behavioral) and at an advanced age while still making very complex decisions about pump, CGM, and data issues Phew! What a premise! Is the optimal strategy for T1D management most likely to be MDI by caregivers in assisted living?
    • 20 hours, 59 minutes ago
      Deborah Wright likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      It's rare I have questions, but if I do, I send a message to my Endocrinologist, and she responds quickly.
    • 21 hours, 1 minute ago
      Deborah Wright likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      I use the patient portal to ask my doctor.
    • 21 hours, 2 minutes ago
      Deborah Wright likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      I seldom have any questions other than RX refill request which I submit through the patient portal. If I do have treatment questions, I typically do my own research, and if not satisfied with what I find out, I submit a question in the portal.
    • 21 hours, 2 minutes ago
      Deborah Wright likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      When I come up with a question between visits, I usually just do some research.
    • 22 hours, 35 minutes ago
      Mike S likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      I use the patient portal to ask my doctor.
    • 22 hours, 35 minutes ago
      Mike S likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      Being at high risk for dementia (both genetic and behavioral) and at an advanced age while still making very complex decisions about pump, CGM, and data issues Phew! What a premise! Is the optimal strategy for T1D management most likely to be MDI by caregivers in assisted living?
    • 22 hours, 52 minutes ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      How to avoid the rebounding effects of a low blood sugar.
    • 22 hours, 52 minutes ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      After making pump setting changes due to new Mounjaro, why are my post meal glucose levels so high and how do we fix it?
    • 22 hours, 52 minutes ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      Will I be okay during pregnancy, especially now that I'm over 40?
    • 22 hours, 55 minutes ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      Being at high risk for dementia (both genetic and behavioral) and at an advanced age while still making very complex decisions about pump, CGM, and data issues Phew! What a premise! Is the optimal strategy for T1D management most likely to be MDI by caregivers in assisted living?
    • 23 hours, 25 minutes ago
      Carrolyn Barloco likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      Being at high risk for dementia (both genetic and behavioral) and at an advanced age while still making very complex decisions about pump, CGM, and data issues Phew! What a premise! Is the optimal strategy for T1D management most likely to be MDI by caregivers in assisted living?
    • 23 hours, 26 minutes ago
      Carrolyn Barloco likes your comment at
      Between your regular T1D care visits, what questions tend to come up that you wish you could ask a diabetes expert? Share your thoughts in the comments.
      Will I be okay during pregnancy, especially now that I'm over 40?
    • 1 day, 10 hours ago
      kilupx likes your comment at
      Do you currently take metformin?
      Before I was correctly diagnosed the primary care physician said I must be type 2 due to my age of 36, even though I was always very thin and had rapidly lost even more weight. He prescribed metformin- I proceeded to get sicker and sicker. Finally got to an endocrinologist who tested and said I was T1D, and I was put immediately on insulin. What a game changer.
    • 1 day, 10 hours ago
      kilupx likes your comment at
      Do you currently take metformin?
      Other I took Metformim for 3 months when I was first incorrectly diagnosed with T2. I am very sensitive to insulin and don’t need it yet.
    • 1 day, 20 hours ago
      Kristi Warmecke likes your comment at
      Do you currently take metformin?
      Wow!
    • 1 day, 20 hours ago
      Kristi Warmecke likes your comment at
      Do you currently take metformin?
      I've had T1D for 50 years. I started taking Metformin 9 months ago. I take full dose at bedtime to manage my morning glucose rise. It keeps the liver from releasing glucose. It has helped.
    • 1 day, 23 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Do you currently take metformin?
      I took it for four years when I was diagnosed with T2. After four years of not being able to control my bs I asked my endocrinologist if I could go on insulin and he said yes and the T2 drugs stopped.
    • 1 day, 23 hours ago
      Gerald Oefelein likes your comment at
      Do you currently take metformin?
      Other I took Metformim for 3 months when I was first incorrectly diagnosed with T2. I am very sensitive to insulin and don’t need it yet.
    • 1 day, 23 hours ago
      Gerald Oefelein likes your comment at
      Do you currently take metformin?
      I took it for four years when I was diagnosed with T2. After four years of not being able to control my bs I asked my endocrinologist if I could go on insulin and he said yes and the T2 drugs stopped.
    • 2 days, 9 hours ago
      René Wagner likes your comment at
      Have you had to switch diabetes medications in the past year due to health insurance changes?
      I hate formulary changes mid year. They should not be allowed!
    Clear All
Pages
    • T1D Exchange T1D Exchange T1D Exchange
    • Articles
    • Community
      • About
      • Insights
      • T1D Screening
        • T1D Screening How-To
        • T1D Screening Results
        • T1D Screening Resources
      • Donate
      • Join the Community
    • Quality Improvement
      • About
      • Collaborative
        • Leadership
        • Committees
      • Centers
      • Meet the Experts
      • Learning Sessions
      • Resources
        • Change Packages
        • Sick Day Guide
        • FOH Screener
      • Portal
      • Health Equity
        • Heal Advisors
    • Registry
      • About
      • Recruit for the Registry
    • Research
      • About
      • Publications
      • COVID-19 Research
      • Our Initiatives
    • Partnerships
      • About
      • Previous Work
      • Academic Partnerships
      • Industry Partnerships
    • About
      • Team
      • Board of Directors
      • Culture & Careers
      • Annual Report
    • Join / Login
    • Search
    • Donate

    At the time of your T1D diagnosis, did you already personally know anyone who had T1D?

    Home > LC Polls > At the time of your T1D diagnosis, did you already personally know anyone who had T1D?
    Previous

    If you use a CGM, have you ever used expired sensors? If so, did you notice any issues with the sensors?

    Next

    In your own words, how would you describe the feeling of a severe low?

    Sarah Howard

    Sarah Howard has worked in the diabetes research field ever since she was diagnosed with T1D while in college in May 2013. Since then, she has worked for various diabetes organizations, focusing on research, advocacy, and community-building efforts for people with T1D and their loved ones. Sarah is currently the Senior Marketing Manager at T1D Exchange.

    Related Stories

    News

    Thyroid Eye Disease (TED): What You Need to Know 

    Jewels Doskicz, 2 days ago 4 min read  
    News

    Immunosuppressants in T1D Research: Expert Opinions from Diabetes Pharmacist Diana Isaacs 

    Jewels Doskicz, 6 days ago 5 min read  
    2025 Learning Session

    The 2025 T1DX-QI Learning Session: Driving Better Diabetes Care 

    Sarah Howard, 2 weeks ago 7 min read  
    Lifestyle

    Barriers to Care in Aging: Voices from the T1D Community 

    Jewels Doskicz, 3 weeks ago 7 min read  
    Lifestyle

    When T1D Becomes a Calling: Stories From our Team 

    Jewels Doskicz, 4 weeks ago 11 min read  
    Meet the Expert

    Meet the Expert: Centering the Voices of Youth and Families from Vulnerable Populations 

    Jewels Doskicz, 4 weeks ago 8 min read  

    48 Comments

    1. Lisa La Nasa

      My mom and my brother had both been dx many years earlier.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    2. Jneticdiabetic

      I wish I had! I learned a few lessons the hard way. I was 18 at diagnosis and referred directly to an adult endocrinologist. I took a diabetes education class, but was the only type 1. It was probably 5 years before I met another T1D. I’ve learned a lot from fellow T1Ds since then. I try to pay it forward and offer myself up as a a “dia-buddy” and advocate for the newly diagnosed and/or their worried parents. I also refer folks to platforms like this which have made it so much easier to connect with people who live it. We’re in this together!

      3
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    3. Wanacure

      I knew my elder cousin had T1D, but did not know she was injecting insulin or was on a diet. She was at least four or five years older than I and she kept to herself. Everyone acted as if T1D did not exist probably to “spare our feelings.”

      2
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    4. Christine Gran

      We did, but we had no idea about what it meant or any of the challenges or complications associated with this disease.

      1
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    5. Jennifer Wieczorek

      I worked in group home setting and we had someone that got insulin but we had to count sodium for him

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    6. cynthia jaworski

      Not until I went to diabetic camp.

      Ii didn’t know what t1d was, anyway, at the age of 10.

      1
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    7. Janice Bohn

      No – but many years later I met a cousin who told me my Great Aunt had T1D.
      Since all of my extended family lives in Sweden there is much I do not know.

      2
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    8. Lawrence S.

      1977 – I was 23 yrs old. No, I did not know anyone with any diabetes, T1D or T2D. I did not know what diabetes was. I had heard the term “sugar diabetes”, so I figured it had something to do with sugar. But, I had no idea what I was about to get into. That may have been a good thing, because I did not get excited or depressed when my doctor told me the diagnosis.

      2
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    9. Mick Martin

      A younger sibling developed T1 about 20 years prior to my own diagnosis. In those days he had to attend a ‘special school’ more than 10 miles away from our home as other schools didn’t have the facilities to deal with someone that had T1.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    10. Annie Wall

      I had known one person, a teenager at a school and residential treatment center. I had no understanding of it and was mystified when he ate a chocolate bar while we were on a hike. Little did I know that a few years later, I would fully understand why he needed that chocolate bar!

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    11. Barbara Bubar

      I was 4-1/2 in 1950 and my parents knew no one although my mother said that after my diagnosis she remembered a distant relative who was an early Joslin patient.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    12. KCR

      I knew a woman with lifelong T1D who had died due to complications some years before my diagnosis. Very sad…

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Lynn Smith

        I said No, but I should have said Yes. I had a cousin who was adopted who was diagnosed at age 2.

        3 years ago Log in to Reply
    13. William Bennett

      Total no. Thought I’d had one personal experience. Around 1977, few years before my dx (1983), I’d been playing a gig when a guy in the audience had a catastrophic low and went into convulsions. Interesting thing is that he was in his twenties, had just been dx’d, and was on a kind of spree–not dealing with it very well. This was from his friends who were along with him. Years later when I was finally dx’d I thought of the episode, and I still do, as kind of a reminder of what the whole thing seems like from the outside. No one seemed to know what to do for the guy, lots of people offering advice–stick a knife between his teeth to make sure he doesn’t swallow his tongue, being one idiot thing I remember, before some intelligent person got some sugar into him. For my own part I remember having no idea, just some vague notion that this was what could happen to diabetics. Didn’t help with my own dx later on, though. I had NO idea what was causing my symptoms until my wife happened to talk to my MIL, who had medical background, and she said “get him to a doctor NOW!”

      2
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    14. Nicholas Argento

      I was 8 years old. Had never heard of diabetes. My parents did know of people who had T1D, and they had not done well, not surprising in that era. My first endo told me about a professional tennis player who had T1D.

      2
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    15. Tom Rintelmann

      I didn’t know my maternal Grandfather but he was a T1D.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    16. kilupx

      My brother was just he only one I knew. He got type 1 when we were children and the whole household ate his diet. He had died by the time I was diagnosed with LADA at age 66, so technically you could say I did not know anyone with T1D at the time of my diagnosis.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    17. Karington Johnston

      I said yes, I’d had friends with type 1 in the past (elementary and high school) but I didn’t really talk with them anymore. I was diagnosed in college, at 20.

      1
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    18. Ken Raiche

      I knew a total of three people when I was diagnosed. Fortunately for me, one of these three people was my brother and the other two were close friends. I’ve got to admit it made the transition into being a T1D that much easier.

      2
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    19. dholl62@gmail.com

      Yes I did . My maternal grandmother, and my mother
      who passed on when I was 4 years old .

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    20. Tom Caesar

      At 19 had no awareness or knowledge on diabetes. I’m the only lucky one in my family to have it!

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    21. Marty

      I had an older cousin with T1D. I remember that my aunt worried a lot about her not taking care of herself especially after she left home for college. My mother said “Thank goodness we don’t have diabetes in our family.” I inferred that my cousin was adopted and I believed that for decades. Turned out my mother was just referencing the fact that my cousin was on my father’s side of the family. Ironically, a different cousin on my mother’s side was diagnosed a few years after I was.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    22. rick phillips

      Yes aunt and mom

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    23. Carol Meares

      I had cousins with T1D

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    24. Kristine Warmecke

      Yes, my brother who’s diagnosed at 7 months old.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    25. Trina Blake

      Not at all, no one with any type of D. I sure wish I had. I was 30 and initially Dx’d with T2 due to age (this was when it was juvenile onset or adult onset). I had no risk factors for T2D, but then I didn’t know anyone with D and there was no D of any type in my family so I wasn’t aware of “risk factors”. If I had known someone with D (again of any type) and my Dx wasn’t pre-internet, chances are I would have asked questions and been told that perhaps I needed further testing.

      I was Dx’d with T2 and sent on my way. I had one follow up appt, got scolded and “put on the needle”, NpH 15 units in the morning. Again sent on my way. Finally found in a coma from DKA by a neighbor. Fortunately my day job was with a large city fire dept. WHen the neighbor called to say I wasn’t gonna be at work that day, they figured out that 9-1-1 and to be called and dispatched from HQ. Saved my life. That’s when I got the correct Dx.

      2
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Janis Senungetuk

        Wow, how fortunate your neighbor found you and how, just by chance, you received the emergency medical help you needed! Did you let the MD who missed the correct dx. know what happened?

        1
        3 years ago Log in to Reply
    26. Henry Renn

      I’m fairly certain my parents didn’t personally know any T1s.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    27. Greg Felton

      Sort of an unfair question, since I was diagnosed at a young age when I knew only members immediate family, but my answer is no.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    28. Janis Senungetuk

      My maternal grandfather was dx as a young adult but that was before there was a distinction made between types. He used beef/pork insulin. When I was dx in 1955 my parents knew of relatives on both sides who had died before the discovery/use of insulin, but they kept that history to themselves. At 8 years old I made the diabetes connection with my grandfather when I overheard him say he was going to the pharmacy to buy some insulin. Medical issues were not talked about in my family, even among family members.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    29. Bob Durstenfeld

      Yes, I was 18 months old, my father was the first in our family to have T1D, later two of my younger brothers developed it, as well as my eldest son and his eldest daughter.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    30. Pauline M Reynolds

      My nephew was diagnoed just three months before I was. He was 11; I was 46.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    31. M C

      A classmate had it. She didn’t give herself her own insulin injections – her father did it for her…. which, long before I ever was diagnosed with T1D, I found extremely odd. (This was over 47 years ago)

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    32. AnitaS

      I was 9 years old when diagnosed and I knew that my cousin who was 10 years older than I was gave herself injections, but I never knew why. I didn’t inquire as I guess it never occured to me to ask why. When I was diagnosed, it was then that I learned why my cousin gave herself shots and I was going to have to also.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    33. Jan Masty

      Just my younger brother. I never met anyone else while I was growing up (60’s). And I went to a high school with over 2000 kids. Interesting . There are many more now. Most grade schools have at least 1 or 2 students that are t1 d.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    34. Becky Hertz

      1974, two other girls in my small town had t1d.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    35. KSannie

      I had never heard of the term “diabetes” when I was diagnosed in 1969. The first person I ever met who also had it was a friend of my husband’s, about 1992.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    36. Kathleen Juzenas

      I said no. Actually my older brother was diagnosed in his mid-twenties (just like me). I knew him when we were younger but he had already moved out of state by the time of his diagnosis and did not share with me his experiences.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    37. Melinda Lipe

      I did not ever know any other T1Ds until I attended Diabetes camp. After that, it was many more years.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    38. Joan Fray

      Yes, my dad had T1. My diagnosi made him and my mom so sad. I tried hard to make it no big deal so they wouldn’t worry.

      1
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    39. Lenora Ventura

      Yes. My dad also diagnosed when he was 9, his baby sister diagnosed w/ in 6 months of his diagnosis when she was 5, and his older brother who was diagnosed @ 33.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    40. Kathleen Begbie

      My brother, my cousin and my sister-in-law

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    41. vbaum1956

      Yes my Dad had contracted T1D about 10 yrs before I was diagnosed at 9.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    42. T1D4LongTime

      From age 6, until nearly age 18, I never knew anyone with T1D. My paternal grandmother had T2D and was on insulin. Didn’t know about camps, endocrinologists, support groups, or anything current about diabetes at age 6

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    43. ConnieT1D62

      I didn’t know anybody else with T1 diabetes at time of diagnosis in Dec 1962. I was 8 years old. While in hospital, my MD sent an 11 year old girl with T1D who was his patient to visit me. She did her best to offer an explanation of what “sugar diabetes” was all about. I didn’t quite understand what she was talking about. I didn’t meet others with T1D until I went to overnight camp for kids with diabetes in June 1963 – then I dozens of kids, teens, young adults, and adults living with diabetes.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    44. Mary Ann Sayers

      I was just a kid! A 7+ year old little girl who had had a double hernia operation 6 months earlier.
      Since T1D is an autoimmune disease it’s possible that I was exposed to a virus that resulted in my diagnosis. Up until that point, no family member was diabetic.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    45. PamK

      l had an uncle who was and a friend of my mother’s was also a Type 1.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    46. BonL

      Too young to know.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply

    At the time of your T1D diagnosis, did you already personally know anyone who had T1D? Cancel reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.




    101 Federal Street, Suite 440
    Boston, MA 02110
    Phone: 617-892-6100
    Email: admin@t1dexchange.org

    Privacy Policy

    Terms of Use

    Follow Us

    • facebook
    • twitter
    • linkedin
    • instagram

    © 2024 T1D Exchange.
    All Rights Reserved.

    © 2023 T1D Exchange. All Rights Reserved.
    • Login
    • Register

    Forgot Password

    Registration confirmation will be emailed to you.

    Skip Next Finish

    Account successfully created.

    Please check your inbox and verify your email in the next 24 hours.

    Your Account Type

    Please select all that apply.

    I have type 1 diabetes

    I'm a parent/guardian of a person with type 1 diabetes

    I'm interested in the diabetes community or industry

    Select Topics

    We will customize your stories feed based on what you select here.

    [userselectcat]

    We're preparing your personalized page.

    This will only take a second...

    Search and filter

    [searchandfilter slug="sort-filter-post"]