Medications
Insulin is the only medicine that can treat
type 1 diabetes, and your child is most likely taking
more than one
type of insulin. Your child may take several
injections a day or use an
insulin pump. The insulin pump provides insulin with
fewer injections and is as effective as multiple daily injections for
maintaining
normal or near-normal blood sugar levels.
The amount and type of insulin your child takes will likely change
over time, depending on changes that occur with normal growth, physical
activity level, and hormones (such as during adolescence). Your child may also
need higher doses of insulin when feeling sick or stressed.
- Know the dose of each type of insulin your
child takes, when your child should take the doses, how long it takes for each
type of insulin to start working (onset), when it will have its greatest effect
(peak), and how long it will work (duration).
- Don't let your child
skip a dose of insulin without a doctor's advice.
Medication Choices
- Insulin
What To Think About
A rapid-acting insulin is given with a meal or immediately
afterward. The dose is based on what your child actually ate, not what the meal
plan required. If your child is a "picky eater," this provides flexibility that
may reduce mealtime battles.
Scientists are looking at new types of insulin and better ways to
give it.