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    • 2 hours, 33 minutes ago
      NANCY NECIA likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Do you have unexpired, long-acting insulin in case of pump failure?
      I always keep it, and hope to never use it.
    • 8 hours, 44 minutes ago
      Dennis Dacey likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Do you have unexpired, long-acting insulin in case of pump failure?
      I have not had a vial of long acting Insulin since switching to a pump from regular and NPH shots. I have had two pump failures, but got by with fast acting insulin.
    • 8 hours, 46 minutes ago
      Dennis Dacey likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Do you have unexpired, long-acting insulin in case of pump failure?
      If you pick a large chain pharmacy, you can pretty easily transfer the prescription to another location (and then back, if needed). The pharmacist can do it. 😊
    • 9 hours, 56 minutes ago
      Anita Stokar likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Do you have unexpired, long-acting insulin in case of pump failure?
      If you pick a large chain pharmacy, you can pretty easily transfer the prescription to another location (and then back, if needed). The pharmacist can do it. 😊
    • 12 hours, 10 minutes ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Do you have unexpired, long-acting insulin in case of pump failure?
      I do for now due to a travel incident I lived through back in 2024. What happened was I thought I had packed over a month’s worth all of my pump essentials everything but the cartridges for my Tandem pump. So arriving on the beautiful Pico Island I came to the realization that I had forgot these super important item and trying to get these was impossible. So I had no choice but to buy Lantus pen as well Humalog pen as well when my pump ran out. Fortunately after doing lots of research I can across and individual in our cycling adventure group in Cambrils Spain who worked in the pharmaceutical industry and she was able to get what I needed. It took almost a week of living the MDI thing and it was a real nightmare before being my hands on these cartridges. Hopefully I’ll never have to go through that scenario ever again and the only way is by making a list with cartridge and infusion kit being listed separately.
    • 12 hours, 11 minutes ago
      KSannie likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Do you have unexpired, long-acting insulin in case of pump failure?
      I totally agree. I have been lulled to complacency. When my pump had failed I have used regular doses of insulin. So, to answer the question, no I don't have any long acting insulin.
    • 12 hours, 12 minutes ago
      KSannie likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Do you have unexpired, long-acting insulin in case of pump failure?
      It seems with Medicare you are not permitted to have a prescription in your hand. According to my Endo in Florida, at least, all scripts have to be electronically sent directly to a pharmacy. Is everyone else on Medicare experiencing that? I don’t like it. I want to be able to choose my own pharmacy no matter where I am. Sometimes, one is more convenient than another, especially when traveling. And if my pump breaks over a weekend, good luck getting script. I guess my Endo has an emergency line although I think all messages say: if this is a medical emergency, call 911.
    • 12 hours, 33 minutes ago
      Scott Doerner likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Do you have unexpired, long-acting insulin in case of pump failure?
      Yes, I think all T1D’s should know how to use insulin without their pump. They do konk out on rare occasions.
    • 13 hours, 15 minutes ago
      atr likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Do you have unexpired, long-acting insulin in case of pump failure?
      No but I have expired pens that I would use if needed. They are only expired by a year or two.
    • 13 hours, 15 minutes ago
      atr likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Do you have unexpired, long-acting insulin in case of pump failure?
      It seems with Medicare you are not permitted to have a prescription in your hand. According to my Endo in Florida, at least, all scripts have to be electronically sent directly to a pharmacy. Is everyone else on Medicare experiencing that? I don’t like it. I want to be able to choose my own pharmacy no matter where I am. Sometimes, one is more convenient than another, especially when traveling. And if my pump breaks over a weekend, good luck getting script. I guess my Endo has an emergency line although I think all messages say: if this is a medical emergency, call 911.
    • 1 day, 7 hours ago
      KSannie likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Have you experienced an insulin pump failure and had to use back-up long-acting insulin?
      NO. But, ... Over the years I've had three pump total failures yet I never reverted to long-acting, or a better substitute - background/basal, insulin. In each instance, I effectively managed my diabetes with rapid-acting insulin. In all situations, replacement pumps were delivered to me by 8:15 the morning after failure; one replacement that was delivered to my work office which I programmed while being driven to the airport that morning.
    • 1 day, 7 hours ago
      KSannie likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Have you experienced an insulin pump failure and had to use back-up long-acting insulin?
      Same. I had a replacement pump within 24 hours, but I set an alarm for every 2 hours overnight to check my blood sugar. I'm crazy dependant on my medical tech!!
    • 1 day, 7 hours ago
      KSannie likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Have you experienced an insulin pump failure and had to use back-up long-acting insulin?
      I had two pump failures that sent me to the ER when I was using Medtronic. Since switching to Tandem 6 years ago, I haven’t experienced any failures.
    • 1 day, 13 hours ago
      Kathy Hanavan likes your comment at
      Insulin pump users: Have you experienced an insulin pump failure and had to use back-up long-acting insulin?
      Yes. I keep a pen of Tresiba in the fridge as back-up. When it expires, my endo writes a refill RX or gives me another sample if she has one. I have used when waiting for a replacement pump or when taking a pump break.
    • 2 days, 6 hours ago
      John Henninger likes your comment at
      How many unopened, unexpired insulin pens or vials do you have?
      This is one of those questions that makes me wonder what on earth somebody hopes to learn from the answer. T1D Exchange - please explain.
    • 2 days, 6 hours ago
      ChrisW likes your comment at
      Have you ever been told you couldn’t physically do something because you live with diabetes?
      I was recruited by the CIA when I graduated from college and was well into the process when somebody asked me why my draft status was 4F. I was out the door about an hour later.
    • 2 days, 6 hours ago
      ChrisW likes your comment at
      Have you ever been told you couldn’t physically do something because you live with diabetes?
      I was diagnosed with t1 41 years ago. I was told to NOT have children. But I did not listen and had two healthy children.
    • 2 days, 7 hours ago
      ChrisW likes your comment at
      How many unopened, unexpired insulin pens or vials do you have?
      Funny you should ask right now. I had to personally buy my first-ever vial in 25 years. Thanks Medicare for all the obstacles you place in the way. Am I grateful for Medicare? Yes, I guess, but I paid in all my life and I’m still paying. But Walgreens can never get the preauth right. They don’t send it to my doc or they send the wrong form. So I had the bright idea to change pharmacy’s, Publix. I went and had a convo with them, explaining I’m on a pump, I mentioned part B, the preauth. No problem. Have your doc send the script. That’s a whole other story. Then I get a call from Publix. We don’t do part B. Wow, wish you had told me. OK, I’m just going back to Walgreens. Except Medicare won’t allow refills without doctor script. So they called my doctor and my doc declined it because they had already approved it for Publix. Now I had sent an email explaining all of this to doc. I called my doc but they don’t answer their phones. Left a detailed message but have no idea whether they got anything. So I asked Walgreens if I could buy a vial. Nope, no script from doc. So I went to Publix, explained it all and they sold me a vial for $29. It was worth it but so frustrating because I can’t get my hands on a script anymore and take it where I dam-well please. Sorry for long post. I’m angry.
    • 2 days, 7 hours ago
      ChrisW likes your comment at
      How many unopened, unexpired insulin pens or vials do you have?
      Medicare is basically not covering Tresiba in 2026 :( so I've been busy stockpiling pens. I have enough Tresiba pens in the fridge to get me through '26 without having to buy any.
    • 2 days, 8 hours ago
      ChrisW likes your comment at
      Has your cost of insulin changed in 2025?
      Price is OK. But the bureaucratic migraine is amplified a hundred fold. ᕙ( •̀ ᗜ •́ )ᕗ
    • 2 days, 12 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Has your cost of insulin changed in 2025?
      I started the year paying the $35 Medicare drug cost but then the pharmacy started filling the insulin as Medicare Part B (because it being used in my pump) and I get if for $0.
    • 2 days, 12 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      Has your cost of insulin changed in 2025?
      Medicare cap of $35 a month has been has been wonderful for so many people.
    • 2 days, 12 hours ago
      Kathy Hanavan likes your comment at
      Has your cost of insulin changed in 2025?
      I started the year paying the $35 Medicare drug cost but then the pharmacy started filling the insulin as Medicare Part B (because it being used in my pump) and I get if for $0.
    • 2 days, 13 hours ago
      Bill Williams likes your comment at
      Has your cost of insulin changed in 2025?
      Medicare cap of $35 a month has been has been wonderful for so many people.
    • 2 days, 13 hours ago
      Judith Marged likes your comment at
      Has your cost of insulin changed in 2025?
      I started the year paying the $35 Medicare drug cost but then the pharmacy started filling the insulin as Medicare Part B (because it being used in my pump) and I get if for $0.
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    Were you extremely ill before being diagnosed with T1D? Please share more in the comments.

    Home > LC Polls > Were you extremely ill before being diagnosed with T1D? Please share more in the comments.
    Previous

    Have any of your T1D devices been recalled by the FDA? If yes, please share more about your experiences in the comments.

    Next

    Have you ever “microdosed” glucagon (given a small amount) when you’ve been sick to your stomach, had a stubborn low, or for another reason?

    Samantha Walsh

    Samantha Walsh has lived with type 1 diabetes for over five years since 2017. After her T1D diagnosis, she was eager to give back to the diabetes community. She is the Community and Partner Manager for T1D Exchange and helps to manage the Online Community and recruit for the T1D Exchange Registry. Prior to T1D Exchange, Samantha fundraised at Joslin Diabetes Center. She graduated from the University of Massachusetts with a Bachelors degree in sociology and early childhood education.

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    37 Comments

    1. Steven Gill

      I’ve had what I know now were symptoms for years, to include fatigue, hunger, thirst, frequent urination needs (pee’d a lot), and serious mood swings. Didn’t feel great, was under stress worldwide and personally; but might have been attributed to diabetes.

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

      Yes. The Summer of 1977, I was very sick, flu-like symptoms for what seemed like several weeks to a month. Then the diabetes symptoms hit me hard; extreme thirst and exhaustion. I was diagnosed within a week of the T1D symptoms starting, in July, 1977.

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    3. J Mac

      Yes, 12 years old and my parents figured I had the flu, kept on giving me orange juice. End up in the ER in a coma.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    4. Gary Taylor

      Like Lawrence, I was sick with what I assumed was the flu about a week or so before the onset of symptoms (extreme thirst and peeing too often). This was in January/February 1976.

      3
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Kris McDonald

        Same thing for me. Weirdly also the same year.

        1
        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    5. T1diabetic

      I had mononucleosis and in a couple of months I was diagnosed with T1D.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    6. Anita Stokar

      I was 9 years old. At first I just started losing weight and peeing alot but I felt fine. My 3rd grade teacher asked me if I felt okay and I said yes, as I did feel fine. My mom told me to eat more as I had lost quite a bit of weight (about 15 pounds and I wasn’t a chubby child), but I said I was eating. Then one day at school, I felt miserable and went to the principal’s office. My parents came to pick me up and took me to the emergency room. Right after giving a urine sample, I lapsed into a coma. Thankfully I woke up the next day.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    7. mojoseje

      Yes. My mother had just died. The church ladies were bringing donuts and goodies every night. It was around Halloween. I was seven. I started wetting my pants, coughing, and behaving ‘strangely’. The doctor put me on antidepressants and antipsychotics because he thought I was acting out because of grief. They also prescribed cough syrup. My last memory was being wheeled in a wheelchair into an elevator, holding the bottle of cough syrup and passing out and dropping it to the floor. I said, “I’m sorry!” and then I crashed. This was 1969, so I’m sure the drugs were powerful. I lapsed into a coma on Halloween and it took them at least two days to figure out that it was my blood sugar.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    8. Daniel Bestvater

      I had a bad flu bug for about a week at 14(1977). After that weight loss, frequent urination and insatiable thirst. My family doctor put me on Diabeta(glyburide). I continued to loose weight until a second doctor admitted me to hospital and started insulin immediately. I gained about 15 pounds over a two week period and needed new clothes. What a trip, I don’t think this would happen nowadays at least I hope not.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    9. Brad Larson

      Yes, In 1970 I lost 10 kilo in two weeks. Passed out on the spring practice High School football field. Prior to passing out, told the coach that I was sick, he said “go barf baby.” I had vision problems too at that moment. Our GP knew right away and sent me to UCLA medical. They set me on the right path. Thanks Dr. Neil Litman

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    10. Scott Doerner

      I was fine, but on day of diagnosis, I was in DKA, so I should’ve answered yes

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    11. Conniekaycox

      I was very sick had lost 25 lbs in two weeks excessive urination and thirst could barely walk across a small room when went to Dr was admitted to icu for four days with severe dka that happened four years ago 😳 has inspired insane blood sugar management as am terrified to go high again didn’t hurt but almost took my life.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    12. Patricia Dalrymple

      I was 42. I knew I had it before being diagnosed. I was run down because of a work project and was ignoring all the classic symptoms except I couldn’t ignore dropping down to 110 lbs at 5’6”. They thought I was anorexic. They diagnosed T2 wrongly at first.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. kristina blake

        Me too – mis-dx’d with T2 cuz I was 30 years old and they were just changing the names. I went from 110 lbs working weight (professional ballet dancer, 5’6″) to 100 lbs. Didn’t know anything about D of any kind – didn’t know anyone with any type of D and no family members with D (clue for the initial MD, ya think?!) I had had strep throat for about 2 weeks prior, so maybe that was a trigger. I remember the D symptoms getting worse, went back to the doctor, got scolded cuz I obviously wasn’t doing my job (watching my weight and eating better) and so for punishment I was told “I’m gonna put you on the needle”. I was Rx’s 15 units of NpH once a day.
        After a month or so, found by a neighbor in a coma. While she was a gossip and rather ditzy, she was honest and so had a key. She had enough sense to grab her address book to call my day job to say I wasn’t coming in. Lucky for me my day job was with a big city Fire Dept/EMS. They instructed her on a sternum rub, and told her to call 9-1-1. She thought I was too sick for 9-1-1. The Battalion Chief in charge of EMS was there, told her when you are too sick for 9-1-1, you call the coroner. They dispatched from HQ.
        Aside from the medical ramifications of mis-Dx there is also the scolding abuse. When I came out of the coma, during rounds the residents scolded me for not taking care of my D – assuming as many did, that I had had it since I was a child.
        The attending spoke up and said look at her chart. She was Dx’d in the Emergency Dept a week ago. Then went on to educate about the name changes for the types of D.

        1
        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    13. Janice B

      Run down tired all the time, sick to my stomach, loosing weight rapidly – then my vision started to go. I went from 130lbs to 100lbs at 5’5” and when I went to the doctor could no longer see the numbers to dial the phone.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    14. Debbie Dallmann

      At first, my family and I thought I was having a reoccurring cold, then flu. I finally got so sick after throwing up in a store bathroom, my mom took me to the emergency room. This had gone on for about 5 months and I spent a week at the hospital, which has turned into 50 years (next year) of having T1D.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    15. Bob Durstenfeld

      I was diagnosed at age 18 months with severe diaper rash and excessive thirst.
      Hospitalized for a week in 1956.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    16. Patricia Maddix

      I was diagnosed just before my 12th birthday in 1961 on a day following three days of rigorous physical fitness testing at school for which I could hardly participate due to weakness, extreme thirst, extreme urination, and I had also lost weight down to 86 pounds. They put me in the hospital for a week and don’t really know if I ended up in DKA but do remember that I slept all the time and had a voracious appetite. it was probably coming on certainly for months, if not years as I hadn’t really been able to participate in the usual physical activities of kids that age.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    17. Ahh Life

      Every new generation of eyes sees a new version of our diabetic galaxy.

      So much of the diabetic condition feels like a blatant violation of the eighth amendment anyway. 🤕👳‍♀️

      2
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Lawrence S.

        Cruel and unusual punishment.

        1
        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    18. Lori Juhnke

      Yes, like I had the flu and didn’t want to eat…just drink and pee and sleep.
      I thought I had a severe UTI – finally going to the hospital as I was traveling across the US. Sat in the waiting room for an hour, blood draw and I was put in intensive care within 5 minutes of them getting results. My BS was 940 and my body was shutting down.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    19. William Bennett

      I mean, this is the thing that bugs me about using “LADA” designation, which is only kind of informal anyway. The description always seems to include a very gradual onset, like years sometimes. For me it was maybe six weeks from feeling just weirdly a little “off,” like a mild hangover without having drunk anything, to fatigue, nausea, headache, the escalating pissing/thirst spiral (that was the ‘tell’ though I didn’t know it)–to the point of wife saying “we need to get you to a doctor.” Who said I was about 24 hrs from DKA (“Your wife probably wouldn’t have been able to wake you up tomorrow morning”).

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. William Bennett

        Re-reading this, I see the question is aimed at whether there was a triggering illness that maybe set off the auto-immune response. That’s a big YES. This whole other set of symptoms–vague at first–started within a week of getting over a nasty cold. I remember at the time thinking “Damn, I just got OVER a cold! Unfair!” It sure was…

        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    20. Steve Rumble

      I was in severe keto acidosis, but fought friends and family about seeking medical care, 21 year old airman recently returned from TDY in Korea. Ended up passing out and being rushed to the hospital where the T1D was diagnosed.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    21. ConnieT1D62

      Yes. It was 1962 and was 8 years old. I had the mumps in the Fall that year and in late November became increasing ill with polydipsia, polyuria, weight loss, loss of energy and extreme fatigue. Was tested for anemia, leukemia and finally diabetes.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    22. mbulzomi@optonline.net

      I was diagnosed November 1968 and there was no such term, T1D. The only major problem I had is going to the bathroom and urinating a lot then going straight to the water fountain and satisfying my thirst. Typical person with Diabetes, but not diagnosed yet.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    23. GiGi

      When I was ten years old my whole family had the flu. This was in 1972. After everyone else were recovering, I was getting worse. I was more tired and didn’t wake up to use the toilet during the night. I didn’t even wake up after wetting the bed and the amount of urine was greatly increased as well as the frequency. My thirst could not be quenched. I was falling asleep in school, during activities, while eating, etc. I lost my appetite and lost a lot of weight. I was vomiting the little bit I did eat. My mind became muddled and I was very emotional. I cried alone. I knew I was dying and I told my mom that I felt like I was going to go to sleep and not wake up. Mom took me to three pediatricians all three thought I was suffering from severe depression! My grandfather called his doctor who saw me right away. He did a lot of tests. He had us wait in his office for the test results. After what seemed like a whole day, he came in and said, “She’s right…right now she’s dying BUT there’s a treatment!” I wasn’t happy about my having to give myself shots every day for the rest of my life, but I was happy I could have the rest of my life! This Dr was great! He helped me learn how to live a healthy lifestyle with T1D. He was very positive about life with T1D. I’m 62 years old now and I’ve had more terrible doctors than great ones. The one I have now is wonderful!

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. KarenM6

        Hi Gigi –
        Our stories are so similar!
        I’m glad for your grandfather’s doctor!

        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    24. Marie Raiguel

      No, I went to the eye doctor in August 1994 for a routine exam and got a new eyeglass prescription, as usual. 6 weeks later, I went to get my learner’s permit and failed the eye test. Went back to the eye doctor, got another new prescription. 3 months later. I was having trouble reading the blackboard in school, so we went back to the eye doctor. He noted that I have a strong family history of T1D (my mother and maternal grandmother both had it) and sent me fa glucose tolerance test. My dad took me to the hospital’s outpatient lab a few weeks later and my fasting glucose was 380. They couldn’t run the 4-hour glucose tolerance test because of the risk of putting me in DKA .

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    25. Kristen Clifford

      I was sick in the month leading up to my diagnosis. When it started with the thirst, I thought it was part of a cold that wouldn’t go away. Then came the weight loss. After that came the nausea, which I initially attributed to not being able to handle French food, but then we thought it was a stomach flu.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    26. Олег Савицький

      Flu

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    27. tmeagher

      My son had a pretty bad ‘flu’ in February, but since it was 2020, maybe it was Covid(?)
      In the next 6 weeks, he dropped weight, drank tons of juice, peed the bed which was the last straw. I stayed up all night doing research and brought him to see his PCP in the AM and his sugar was over 600. We spent 6 hours in the endocrinologist’s office and they sent us home-no hospitalizations during Covid. He was 14.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    28. KarenM6

      Yes. My whole family had had the flu, but I didn’t get better. I had just turned 5.
      I had allllll the classic symptoms of diabetes after that.
      I was taken to multiple doctors over a few days who all said I was lying and that I was just worried and a hypochondriac.
      Finally, a senior doctor recognized that I was very ill and I needed to go to the hospital which was a little over an hour away.
      While the nurses there were nice, I was alone a lot (ie no family).
      After I was home and dealing the best I could, the doctors I had were mean and unhelpful. They treated me very poorly.
      Anyway, I’m straying from the point… which is, yes, I had the flu before diagnosis!

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. KarenM6

        Oh, not that it’s relevant to the question, but I was in the hospital for a month.

        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    29. Clare Fishman

      I had Coxsackie B virus in February, 1975 with a very high fever. I was diagnosed in May with the classic symptoms of extreme thirst and having to pee every 10 minutes.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    30. T1D4LongTime

      I do not remember being “sick”, but rather very, very thin and had frequent urination. It was 58 years ago….. some of the details have faded from memory LOL! (But not the terror of having blood drawn at age 6… ugh!)

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    31. Mary Ann Sayers

      I was 7 years old in 1954 when dx. My mother took me to the doctor because I was constantly drinking water and bedwetting, but I don’t remember being sick.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply

    Were you extremely ill before being diagnosed with T1D? Please share more in the comments. Cancel reply

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