Children living with Type 1 diabetes

25 Oct, 2019 - 00:10 0 Views

The ManicaPost

Gloria Ganyani Health Correspondent
Ten-year-old Moffat was diagnosed of Type 1 diabetes in January this year. His mother, Mrs Sibanda shares his experience:

During the initial days, Moffat had an undying thirst and he used to urinate constantly. When I took him to the clinic, the nurses suspected that he could be diabetic, and they referred me to Mutare Provincial Hospital. He was tested for diabetes and his blood sugar level was too high. He spent three weeks in hospital and was discharged on February 15.

Before Moffat was registered on the Medecins Sans Frontieres/ Ministry of Health and Child Care (MoHCC) NCD pilot programme, we were buying medication on our own. It was expensive for us but we had to look for the money to buy the medicine.

MSF in working in partnership with MoHCC to provide treatment and care for patients with diabetes and hypertension.

Moffat has since been registered on the pilot programme and we are receiving free treatment (insulin and syringes) every month from the hospital. Administering insulin at home is not difficult. We were taught how to do it. I sometimes inject him and he can inject himself. He was taught how to inject himself during the time when we were in hospital.

We received counselling from the hospital. We were told that this happens and we need to be able to control the blood sugar. We were told about the food that Moffat has to eat. People with diabetes, have to eat food with less starch and more vegetables.

I used to monitor his blood sugar three times a day but now; I cannot afford to buy the strips. I have not tested him for over a month now.

People with Type one diabetes have to monitor their blood sugar regularly using glucometers and glucometer strips.

I can monitor him physically. From his behaviour, I can tell whether his blood sugar is low or high.

The cost of transport to the hospital is also a challenge. Transport costs are increasing.

What worries me is the fact that, my son is still young and I can not imagine that he has to continue taking insulin for the rest of his life. (People with Type 1 diabetes are supposed to inject themselves with insulin twice a day for the rest of their life for survival).

MSF has been providing treatment, care and support for patients with non-communicable diseases such as diabetes and hypertension in Manicaland province, mainly in Chipinge and Mutare using a nurse-led model and introducing differentiated service delivery (DSD) models since 2016.

Share This:

Sponsored Links

We value your opinion! Take a moment to complete our survey
<div class="survey-button-container" style="margin-left: -104px!important;"><a style="background-color: #da0000; position: fixed; color: #ffffff; transform: translateY(96%); text-decoration: none; padding: 12px 24px; border: none; border-radius: 4px;" href="https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/ZWTC6PG" target="blank">Take Survey</a></div>

This will close in 20 seconds