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My Spin on the Roche / Diabetes Social Media Summit

The Diabetes Social Media Summit "Think Tank" Picture courtesy of Roche.
For a numbered legend of the photo and links to each person click here 
Thanks tudiabetes!

Many a post is already up regarding Roche’s new Media Summit- I needed a few days to rap my head around what I had just been a part of.

First off, BIG THANKS to Amy for making it happen and asking me to be a part of something that was not just historic, but incredibly life changing!

Second set of BIG THANKS go to Roche, who extended the invite and were incredibly brave to invite us all out, on their dime, and for listening to what we as Patient Bloggers  and Patients had to say - both positive and negative. As a group, we were not at a loss for words and thefact that they were willing to listen, no holds bared, was incredible!

The Day started off on an annoying note at Philadelphia International Airport when I was unable to update Diabetesaliciousness from my Blogger account via my iPhone - I even approached another iphone user at the airport and he had no luck getting the keyboard to appear in the blogger account either.

On a positive note- Leeann from The Butter Compartment was sitting at the terminal when I arrived and we were happy to find out that we were on the same plane!

The flight left about 20 minutes late but was uneventful.  The plane was a shuttle and I was happy when we landed.

When we arrived in Indiana, Leeann ran to baggage claim and I ran to the rest room. When we met up again, we were joined by  Bennet, from Your Diabetes May Vary,

who had also been on our plane.

We were met by a Driver whose name I forget, and who was not a  Roche employee, but an employee of a shuttle company whom Roche works with.  MORE ON THIS LATER.

In the lobby we were greeted by Scott S, Joe, and Gina- all whom I’d met before. Lot’s of hugs ensued and I ran up to my room to get dressed for Dinner, then I ran back to the lobby where I ran into William Lee Dubois- except I wasn’t sure if it was him or not so I just said “Hello” and smiled. We had the opportunity to talk in ernest later on.


D Ladies in the house!

At the Bar I ran into more Diabetes folks I'd met IRL; Fran, Kerri, Amy,and Bernard who I'd met on previous D-outtings, and  immediately met Chris, Scottie J, Sandra,  David from Diabetes Daily, Kitty (who I'd talked with on the phone) and Crystal for the first time in Real LIfe

I also met and  talked with both Brandy from Diabetic Sisters and Jeff Hitchcock from Children With Diabetes, , but not nearly enough, but they were awesome just the same!

 When I turned to my left there was Charlie Cherry from Diabetes Power Hour, all dressed in black and very Johnny Cash like, standing next to Chris from Diabetic Rockstar

The bar was Diabetes Blog Central and the Roche reps had a difficult time getting us out of the lobby- it was like a class reunion and people 

Scott S & his "Angels" 

were hugging, chatting, taking pics and buying drinks. We literally could have stayed there all night!

I was standing next to Amy T, Fran C, and Riva Greenberg when a Roche rep grabbed us and steered us towards the hotel entrance “ We need to start filling up the shuttle to the restaurant, so a group of us got on the shuttle and began bonding even more.

We arrived at Maggiano’s and walked into a dinning room filled with Roche Reps from every department. They walked up to us and immediately started engaging us in conversation – and we did the same. It was very strange and flattering to hear one’s blog quoted from the folks at Roche-I’m glad they did their research!

Half way into the  "getting to know you portion of the evening I would meet Ninjbetic (and ran across the dining room to hug him tight) and  CALPUMPER  in the flesh, both who experienced flight delays, for the first time- and they are wonderful!

 Dinner at Maggiano’s has been described as a 7h grade dance with Roche employees interested in life with diabetes and DBloggers willing to share. And that’s exactly what it was! I believe both sides walked away from the evening knowing the other on a personal level, and a great time was had by all!

At the Dinner/Dance with my boys!

Room 966 A.K.A - The Room of Shared Stories...and a Stalker Free Zone for those being stalked by Tim

After more chatting and giggling, we got down to the business of sharing our D story. It was amazing and I’m not sure if I can put it all into words, except to say, at that very moment there’s no place I would have rather been.

When It was my turn, I took a deep breath- (FYI, I am usually NEVER at a loss for words regarding life with D) but I have to tell you, as I looked around at the faces in room 966, I felt that I was looking into the eyes of my Diabetes, past, present, and future. And for one split second, I thought of a particular face that would have benefited the most from the DOC, but had left this world back in 1991. The emotion that had been welling inside me all night, came to the surface and I couldn’t hold back.

I talked about my “D Story” and I’m really not sure exactly what I said,

but I do remember at one point I broke my own “There’s no crying in baseball” rule and my voice began to faltered. I started to cry tears of acceptance and joy, of loss and happiness all rolled into one.

G-Ninja opened his arms and hugged me tight and made me laugh, and in that room, I felt safe.

Room 966 was also protected Chris’s virtue from his stalker Tim- so it was truly a safe haven for all!

Thursday – The Summit-

The Summit itself was 8 hours of intense Dialogue between the diabetes communities expressing our wants needs and concerns with Roche.

The first part of the morning was devoted to ways in which to reach out to the patient population, creating guidelines, and  a Manifesto for both Pharma and Patient Bloggers to follow in Social Media. Both Manny & Amy have detailed breakdowns-GO READ THEM if you haven’t already.

Roche and other Pharmaceutical companies want to enter the world of New Media and as Diabetes consumers, and we want them to- absolutely. But we,as Patient Bloggers, Patients, and Consumers require that Pharma's participation is done in a way that’s honest and upfront, and in a way where we the consumer concerns will not only be heard, but validated.

During a lunch breakout session, I told Dan Majestic, Director of Sales for Roche, “That Diabetes is a Technology based disease and we need to be able to afford the technology, because our life literally depends in it - In order to treat we need to test, and test often.”

Not only do all companies across the board need affordable testing options, (and insulin, insulin-pump, CGM and other options) we need insurance and Medicare to stop limiting the amount of strips they are willing to pay for.

For instance, Medicare will only pay for patients to test 3 times a day. How does one fix their blood sugar issue by testing 3 times a day?

All the diabetics in the room agreed that advertising MUST stop pitching the two faces of diabetes that the public knows:  

1. The Ideal Diabetic

2. The Bad Diabetic (Steel Magnolia version)

For all of us in the Dblogville and beyond, the “Ideal Diabetic” is not one whose numbers are constantly at a 97. 

The Ideal Diabetic is one who puts the guilt of the numbers aside and learns from every test taken. 

The Ideal Diabetic is one who makes mistakes and learns from them.

The Ideal Diabetic is one who voices her or his opinion and becomes not just a Diabetes Advocate for themself, but for everyone else whose lives are affected by the disease.

We in the DOC – and beyond, ARE the Ideal Diabetic-the rest of society needs to relearn what diabetes is and what it means to be a PWD.

Kelly Close, from Close Concerns mentioned that Diabetes is perceived as a character flaw- and she’s absolutely right! 

I've said it before and I'll say it again,Diabetes is the only disease (besides sexually transmitted diseases) where the patient is blamed for their disease.

A perfect example of this was what LeenAnn, Bennet, and I experienced on the car ride to our hotel. 

The 3 of us were picked up by a Black Car Service, and the following conversation transpired with our Driver, who WAS NOT a Roche Rep, but he did represent John Q Public’s ideal regarding Diabetes:

Driver: SO, what business are you all in?

Me: We are in the business of living a great life with Diabetes.

Driver: REALLY? A great life with Diabetes? You all should take your patients to Dialysis ward- let them see what happens when Diabetics don’t take care of themselves.

I looked at Leeanne and her face was literally frozen in horror.

Bennet: WE ARE THE CLIENT.

Me: YEP, WE are People with Diabetes.

Driver: I didn’t mean to offend, really I didn’t I WAS A PATIENT in the Dialysis ward and my mom’s a diabetic.

Me: Times are different today; it’s much easier to take of your diabetes. Nothing is off limits and the technology is much more advanced than 30 years ago-it’s more advanced that 5 years ago. 

Needless to say, we were on the defense-, which is not very different than most days for those of us with the Big D.

Do I blame the Driver for his poorly chosen words that we have all heard before? NO I don't. 

I blame the way society- including Doctor’s blame the PWD. Do I want the gentleman fired? NO I DON’T. I want him and the rest of the world to be properly educated in Diabetes; it's causes,it’s issues, and it’s management to prevent conversations like this from ever having happening.

Back to the Summit:

At one point in the afternoon, Ginger Viera  mentioned the fact that we need to look at 1 number at a time and that she’d much rather "see an ad that showed a meter with a number of 310 with a real Person with Diabetes in ad that stated: This is Ginger, she woke up with a 310, now what? “ And all of us in the DOC wholeheartedly agreed.

I raised my hand and Amy handed me the mic. I stated that I wanted to see the guilt of being a diabetic be removed from the disease.

“As Diabetics, we are always saying, “I’m sorry.” Sorry to our Doctors, our friends, our parents. The guilt starts with the high numbers and the reactions we get. It becomes a Domino affect; patients start fudging logbooks, lying to our docs so we don’t have to feel guilty. Patients stop going to see their Endo’s and stop testing.”

The last 20 minutes of the day was tense when Chris from Diabetic Rockstar brought up the cost of test strips and Fran Carpenter had has back! Let me say that I was not there for Chris’s initial question- I was in the bathroom. But When I returned to the talk questions were flying across the room regarding the cost of test strips.

I wasn’t quite sure what was happening, but I do know SOMETHING MUST be done regarding the cost of being a diabetic on every level.

Scott King, of Diabetes Health had a great suggestion of offering special insurance for test strip customers without insurance- which would be wonderful  for all parties involved. More people could afford to buy the strips and test more often.

Collectively as a whole, we only had 8 hours of discussion and 8 hours isn’t enough to change the way things are done. But I believe it was a great first step in the process towards change and understanding between all parties. 

Roche was the first Pharmaceutical Company in history to openly reach-out to a group of Patient Bloggers - that move is both historical and positive on their part, and I thank them for taking that first step and asking me to take part.   

Now, if they can continue with what was started, wonderful things can happen.

END NOTE: I was the only person who stayed a second night, due an original flight that had me leaving the conference by 1pm.  I had signed up for the Roche tour and didn’t want to miss it. Roche was kind enough to change my flight in June and I was able to stay the extra night-, which was great thing because I was physically and emotionally exhausted. The Tour of the Test Strip manufacturing plant was impressive, a lot goes into to the production of those little strips, including gold, rocket science, and many peoples sweat and hard work. Both William Lee Dubois and David Mandosa have excellent recaps- READ THEM.

When I said my goodbyes to the group on the airport shuttle I was sad. I hugged everyone tight and as I got off the bus, Scottie J was getting on-“Hey what about me, where’s my hug?” As I hugged him tight and we told one another how we felt from the heart.

The car ride back was quiet, the hotel was quiet, even my dinner for one at The Cheesecake Factory was quiet- I was missing friends and trying to fully understnad what had just transpired in the past 32 hours. The waitress had to come back 4 times before I was ready to order. Note to self: Never go to the Cheese Cake Factory when you want to have a light meal and some self-reflection UNLESS you know the menu!

“I needed "more time" in every sense of the phrase,” and that's exactly what I told my waitress, and she gave it to me.  Allowing me to sitting outside on the patio, with my sunglasses on, which was good thing because I started to tear up. I missed my D friends so much, and I was so proud of what we had all accomplished that day.

 

Homeopathy, Mastitis and Cows

Homeopathy, Mastitis and Cows
More evidence that homeopathy works! You can find a summary of the evidence, and the reference at

http://www.homeopathy-ich.org

In  brief, this is an EU funded research project that found that homeopathy protects cows against potential udder infection. Over 100 cows in Switzerland took part in the trial, and results showed that homeopathy gave 9-fold better protection compared to the control groups.

The homeopathy denialists, and homeophobes will undoubtedly claim two things. First, the cows knew they were being treated, so it was just placebo effect! And/or that the quality of the research was not good enough! But then, who cares about what they think. This is just further proof of the power of homeopathy, and so is welcome additional evidence.



Jet Hagged

Diazon/Jet Hag -The two faces of Kelly


Today is another day indeed and much better then the previous one. A big shout out to all of you who helped me through yesterdays crap storm! I think part of the reason I was so discombobulated and stressed out yesterday was not only due to a bad case of the Mondays, but the lingering effects of jet lag. Yes, yours truly was Jet Hagged.

The past 5 weeks has been filled with lots of travel – which I love, except for the getting to and from part. Last week took me on a three-day work trip (Tuesday through Thursday) where I crossed two time zones and spent the majority of my time on a plane and a full 28 hours at my intended destination. Was it worth it? Yes indeed it was.

Diabetically speaking, my blood sugars were not a problem...for the most part.

But the whole plane thing was and always does throw my body clock for a loop.

When I fly I don’t sleep a wink. I wish that wasn’t true, but apparently that’s just how I roll. I spent most of my time reading and listening to my ipod, but both get old after 5 hours on a plane.

I drink tons of water to begin with, but I double that amount when I travel. I did try to rest when I got to my hotel. I actually crawled under the covers and attempted a nap before dinner, but sadly it was just an attempt, no actual nap occurred.

I didn’t change my basal settings while I was away, but I did set a few temporary basal rates and watched my blood sugars like a hawk. Blood sugars were good for the most part, a few after dinner highs, but nothing that a correction bolus couldn't fix.

When I returned home Thursday night I was tired and happy, but I still couldn’t sleep. I think I finally crawled into bed around midnight.

I was at work by 9 a.m. on Friday morning and was fine the first half of the day, but I felt and most likely looked like something the cat dragged in for the second 1/2.

My weekend consisted of lounging, beating the heat, and a few prior commitments with old friends. Still, I don’t think I ever really caught up on my sleep, let alone adjusted to my home turf time zone. And lets face it, the crazy hot weather on the east coast didn’t help.

Diabetes wise, I was doing OK, but energy wise, not so much.

All I wanted to do was sleep.

Cut to yesterday and my “bad case of the Mondays” major meltdown and perfect storm of diabetes/life bullshit (say that three times fast) and I was officially spent!

So I’m curious folks, how do you handle your diabetes when it comes to jetlag and traveling?

Do you find yourself fine during the trip, but a bit “off” after, or is the other way around for you?

How do your blood sugars react to long flights and different time zones?

Any jetlag tips you can share with the rest of us?

Bottom line: How do you prevent yourself from turning into a total Jet Hag?

Insulin: It Was 90 Years Ago Today......


Heroes of the world: Best & Banting


On July 27th, 1921 millions of lives were saved, including ours.


On July 27th, 1921, Frederick Banting & Charles Best successfully isolated the hormone the world would come to know as insulin. Testing began by creating diabetes symptoms in dogs (and whether your a PETA fan or not, be grateful - You owe the Doctors & the dogs they tested on your life - literally and figuratively,) and a few months later, human trials were started.

Within 18 months, insulin became widely available (and thanks to the University of Toronto, royalty free to Pharma Companies) to the public and millions of lives were saved and they were awarded the 1923 Nobel Prize.


So today. regardless of whether your diabetes is playing nice or being bitchy, just remember that 90 short years ago, if Banting & Best hadn't changed the world, you wouldn’t be reading my blog post because I wouldn't have been around to write it!

And as long as were being honest - You probably wouldn't have been around to read it!


So while we continue to raise funds for a cure 24X7, 365 days a year, let’s remember to give thanks to Banting, Best!

Because without them we wouldn’t be here and the world would be a much less interesting place without people with diabetes in it!


I originally wrote & published the following post on January 19, 2010.


I feel that it's especially appropriate to repost it today & I hope you like it!

#########



Dear Doctors Banting & Best.

I just wanted to take a moment to Thank-You for giving me the gift of LIVING.

Because of you and your efforts, I've lived past the age of 8.

Instead of being yet another sad memory for parents who lost their child to an illness that offered no hope, I became a girl who not only lived, but grew up to be a woman who is becoming.

Because of your diligence and hard work, I had many firsts.

My first kiss

My first love

My first heartbreak

Too many firsts to list without leaving so much out.

Because of the gift of your discovery, I was able to live and learn and continue to do so everyday.

I became an Auntie multiple times and learned to love others more than myself.

I attended and graduated college.

I traveled to Europe and saw the wonders of Venice and Paris.

Because of you I was able to discover that I loved books, performing, writing, helping others with manage their life with diabetes, and every shade of the color green.

I’ve swum with manatees, and I've climbed the Mexican pyramids on the longest day of the year.

I've worked at jobs I've loved, and I've worked in jobs I haven't.

I was able to see my niece perform on Broadway and cried tears of joy and pride.

And was incredibly grateful and proud.

If you never discovered insulin, I never would have met her, let alone watched her shine on “The Great White Way.”

I've been granted the gift of 12 wonderful nephews and nieces and have been know the joy of seeing each of them grow and become the wonderful & individual pieces of art they are.

If you hadn’t had your own burning passion to save those of us with diabetes,

I never would have been able to discover my own passions.

I never would have lived, let alone blogged.

I wouldn't have a job helping others with Diabetes.

By your discovery of insulin, I was able to learn what I don’t like - Which is also a great gift.

Reaching adulthood has taught me that I’m no fan of FOX News or MTV’s The Jersey Shore.

And that I prefer wine over beer, V-Necks over Crew Necks, and my GPS over a map any day of the week!

Because insulin was discovered, my father was able to have children, and my siblings and I were not only conceived, but saved by your discovery - THANK YOU.

Thank you for not allowing my parents to lose three children and a grandson.

Thank you for giving my oldest sister the gift of motherhood 3 times over.

Thank you for allowing my nephew to graduate Berkley with honors and become a Professor of Literature.

Thank you for allowing both my Aunts and one of my first cousins to become mothers.

Thank you for giving every single one of my friends with diabetes the gift of living life and every single person with diabetes the opportunity to do so!

Thank you for my gifts of strength, tenacity,humor and empathy. I strongly believe those traits were greatly enhanced by being a person who lives her life every single day with diabetes.

Sometimes I think in the bustle of life and looking for the cure, we forget that it wasn’t until 1922 that children and adults no longer died when being diagnosed with diabetes.

Up until then, diabetes was a death sentence.

Today diabetes a life sentence- and by

“life sentence” I mean the ability to live life to the fullest EVERY SINGLE DAY.

I will admit, there are times in my life when I haven’t taken advantage of the act of living fully.

But now, I relish every moment big and small.

Little moments have just as much meaning as big ones – because I am here to experience them.

Do I want a cure in my lifetime?

ABSOLUTELY!

I don’t want anyone else to be diagnosed with my disease. I don’t want another person to suffer mentally or physically because diabetes has entered their lives.

I am ready to say GOODBYE to Diabetes for good!

BUT I am so grateful for the gift of living that was given to me because of you both and

I love you without every having had the privilege of meeting you.

I think of you both everyday- and I say a prayer of thanks.

I want to live my best life not just for me and those I love, but for you.

Your the reason I'm alive.

To not live a great

life would be a disservice to me AND you!

I will continue“becoming" and, not just for myself, but because really, who am not to?

I am the girl who lived and is now a woman who IS....and is BECOMING.

And I owe the fact that I am living to you both!

THANK YOU.

Kelly K

Yours truly in front of a very small portion of 1 person's lifetime supply of insulin

at: Breakthrough,The Discovery of Insulin Exhibit in NYC

Photo By sixuntilme.com Creator & Curator, Kerri Sparling!


90 years after the discovery of insulin, there are still children and adults without access to insulin - And that’s OUTRAGEOUS.

If Banting & Best were alive today, I know that they'd be OUTRAGED!


Want change the world in the spirit of Banting & Best? Of course you do! And it's not as hard as you think!

You really can make a difference by taking part in The International Diabetes Federation's "O Is For Outrage Campaign."

Just click on the link below and create a virtual postcard to send to President Obama, urging him to not only attend the United Nation's Summit on Global Health issues on September 19th & 20th, 2011, but to show the rest of the world that he's committed to the prevention, control & help to remove the stigma of non- communicable diseases, especially diabetes.

http://www.idf.org/O_is_for_OUTRAGE