Home Treatment
When you have diabetes, whether it is
type 1 diabetes,
type 2 diabetes, or
gestational diabetes, one of the most important skills
you will learn is how to manage your blood sugar level. Following your health
professional's instructions on the use of
insulin or diabetes medicines, diet, and exercise will
help you avoid blood sugar problems. You will learn to recognize the symptoms
and distinguish between high and low blood sugar levels. It may be difficult
for a parent of a young child to distinguish the
difference between high and low blood sugar symptoms in a
child.
Learn the symptoms of high and low blood sugar
levels.
Once you have learned to recognize high or low blood sugar
levels, you can take the appropriate steps to bring your blood sugar level back
to target blood sugar levels.
People who
keep their blood sugar levels under control with diet, exercise, or oral
diabetes medicines are less likely to have problems with high or low blood
sugar levels.
Learn how to deal with high
blood sugar levels. Be sure to know how fast your insulin medicine will work to
bring your blood sugar down. Some insulins work very fast while regular insulin
takes a little longer to bring the sugar level down. Knowing how fast your
insulin works will keep you from using too much too quickly.
Learn how to deal with low blood
sugar levels. Because you have diabetes and can have low blood sugar levels,
you need to keep some type of food with you at all times that can quickly raise
your blood sugar level. These should be quick-sugar foods (about 15 to 20 grams of carbohydrate) that puts glucose into
your bloodstream in about 5 minutes. Any quick-sugar food on this list will
raise your blood sugar about 30 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dL) in about 15 to
20 minutes. Be sure to check your blood sugar level again 15 minutes after
eating a quick-sugar (carbohydrate) food to make sure your level is getting
back to a safe range. When your blood sugar gets to 70 mg/dL or
higher, you can eat your normal meals and snacks.
Quick-sugar foods| Food | Amount |
|---|
Table sugar | 1 tablespoon |
Fruit juice or regular soda pop | ½ cup |
Fat-free milk | 1 cup |
Honey or corn syrup | 1 tablespoon |
Jam | 2 tablespoons |
Raisins | 2 tablespoons |
Gumdrops | 17 small |
Life Savers candy | 8 pieces |
Hard candy | 3 pieces |
Glucose tablets | 3 tablets |
Glucose gel | ½ tube |
It is important to know that sugar foods like a candy bar
or ice cream do not help raise low blood sugar levels quickly because these
foods also have fat and protein. So the body cannot use the sugar
(carbohydrate) in these foods quickly to raise the blood sugar level.
Diabetes in children: Preventing low blood
sugar
Diabetes in children: Dealing with low blood
sugar
Diabetes: Dealing with low blood sugar from
insulin
Diabetes: Dealing with low blood sugar from
medicines
Gestational diabetes: Dealing
with low blood sugar
Since low blood sugar levels can quickly become a medical
emergency, it is important that you wear a bracelet or necklace or carry a card
that says:
- I have diabetes.
- Emergency
treatment is needed for a severe low blood sugar level.
If you have severe symptoms of low blood sugar, someone
else may need to give you a shot of glucagon. If this occurs, be sure to call
your health professional immediately to let him or her know this has
happened.
Symptoms to Watch For During Home Treatment
Use the Check Your Symptoms section to
evaluate your symptoms if any of the following occur during home
treatment.