Today’s paper carries an article about the arrest of a diabetic man who caused a horrific car accident while in the throes of hypoglycemia. He is charged with “driving under the influence of insulin.” No kidding. The prosecution alleges that he injected himself with too much insulin about 2 hours before the accident. What is unstated is that the driver should have known better.
Two young people were killed in this wreck and seven other people were injured, including the diabetic driver. I remember the wreck – it was quite a headline-maker for several days. A day or so after it happened, the driver’s diabetes was implicated. I remember being glad that it wasn’t some stupid drunk and feeling sorry for the driver. I never thought him to be negligent. And this was before Isabella was diagnosed and before I learned so much about the literal ups and downs of diabetes.
Now, reading the article about his arrest and the intention to prosecute him for manslaughter, I am appalled. How ignorant. But I’m also realizing just how little people who don’t live with diabetes know about the disease – ironic, since seven months ago I was right there with them.
I can rapidly catalog what I “knew” before Isabella introduced me to diabetes:
Hypoglycemia: There was a girl in my 7th grade homeroom who was diabetic. I was jealous because she had standing permission to eat a snack whenever she needed it.
Fake sugar: My grandfather became diabetic late in his life. He had to eat nasty sugar-free candy. My mother made two pumpkin pies every Thanksgiving: one regular and one made with sugar substitute. I never tried Grandpa’s pie.
Injections (1): Beth, my step-grandma, injected his insulin. Later, I injected her with procrit. The experience of giving injections to a human made poking a syringe into my cat a breeze.
Injections (2): I once happened upon a co-worked with a syringe. To my questioning look, he replied “I’m diabetic.” I can’t clearly recall if he had been injecting his arm or his torso. If it was his arm … well, maybe he ain’t diabetic after all.
Pumps: I used to swim with a gal who is diabetic. She had a pump. We never really discussed her diabetes, except that she once told me she had trouble keeping it under control.
Possible eye troubles: Nina Courtlandt, a character on All My Children, was diabetic. She was constantly threatened with blindness, collapsing at inopportune moments, and the like. I’d guess that she wasn’t too well controlled, either.
Poor circulation & wound healing: The woman who had this job before me is diabetic (Some would say I stole her job. Let’s not go into that now.) She is morbidly obese and has the gnarliest-looking feet I’ve ever seen. Several years ago she needed surgery for a broken ankle. When the surgical wound wouldn’t heal, her foot was very nearly amputated.
And that’s about it. A patchwork of exposures and experiences that add up to not a whole lot. I’ll bet that my catalog is very similar to what the average guy knows – and that the average guy could easily believe that the diabetic driver involved in that crash “should have known better.”
It’s only because of my cat that I realize the true trickiness of diabetes. Every day I’m glad when Isabella greets me at the door, because I know that there’s always a risk of finding her hypoglycemic, or worse. Her blood glucose is up and down. And I know from reading the blogs of human diabetics that people contend with the same ups and downs and that even experienced diabetics are caught off guard.
I hope someone in the District Attorney’s office comes to their senses and drops this case before it goes to trial. And I hope that driver fights the charges with everything he’s got.
Friday, May 18, 2007
Under the Influence of Insulin
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