
Diabetes in children: Checking blood sugar in a child
Your child needs to know when his or
her blood sugar level is outside the target range. Fortunately, your child's
blood sugar level can be checked anywhere and anytime by using a home blood
sugar (glucose) meter. Blood sugar meters give results in less than a
minute.
Knowing your child's blood sugar level helps you treat low
or high blood sugar before it becomes an emergency. It also helps you know how
exercise and food affect your child's blood sugar and how much short-acting
insulin to give (if your child takes insulin).
Five keys to
success in monitoring your child's blood sugar are:
- Keeping the meter and supplies with your child
at all times.
- Making it a habit to check your child's blood sugar
level by building it into his or her routine.
- Pricking the sides of
your child's fingers, not the tips. The tip of a finger is more sensitive than
the sides.
- Checking the meter's accuracy when you visit the doctor
by comparing results with the doctor's results.
- Keeping the meter
properly maintained and calibrated with the test strips.
Home blood
sugar monitoring is checking your child's blood sugar level using a home blood
sugar meter. This is often referred to as self-testing. Children's blood sugar
may need testing more often when they are first diagnosed with diabetes. When
your child's blood sugar levels are within a target range, he or she may need
to test only before breakfast each day and occasionally at other times of the
day. Children who take insulin may need to check blood sugar levels several
times a day.
To test your child's blood sugar level, prick the
side of a finger with a small needle (lancet) to collect a drop of blood. Place
the drop of blood on the test strip inserted into the meter. For some meters,
the test strip is put into the meter after the blood is applied. Within a
minute or less, the meter shows the results of the test.
Test Your Knowledge
Answer the following question to see whether you understand
what home blood sugar monitoring is.
-
Home blood sugar monitoring involves:
-
Testing the amount of sugar in a sample of blood drawn
from a blood vein.
This answer is incorrect.
Home blood sugar monitoring does not involve testing the amount of sugar in a sample of
blood drawn from a blood vein. The correct answer is b. It involves using a
drop of blood from a finger to check the blood sugar level.
-
Testing the amount of sugar in a drop of blood from a
finger.
This answer is correct.
Home blood sugar monitoring does involve testing the amount of sugar in a drop of blood
from a finger.
Testing your
child's blood sugar at home will help you know:
- When your child's blood sugar is low. Low blood
sugar can lead to an emergency situation. If your child's blood sugar drops
just below the safe range and he or she quickly eats something containing
sugar, the blood sugar will rise and may prevent an emergency.
- When
your child's blood sugar is high. Over time, high blood sugar levels cause
permanent damage to the eyes, heart, kidneys, blood vessels, and nerves. Having
diabetes at a young age increases your child's risk for these complications
during young adulthood. Keeping blood sugar levels within a safe range
decreases the risk of complications.
- What your child's blood sugar
level is before a meal. If your child takes short-acting insulin, you can use
these blood-sugar results to determine how much insulin to
give.
- How exercise affects your child's blood sugar. Exercise
usually lowers blood sugar levels.
- What your child's blood sugar is
when he or she is sick. Severe illness or stress usually causes
higher-than-normal blood sugar levels.
- When your child's insulin or
oral medicine for diabetes may need to be adjusted. If your child's blood sugar
levels remain high over a period of time or your child has frequent low blood
sugar, his or her medicine may need to be adjusted. Talk with your doctor about
this.
Test Your Knowledge
Answer the following question to see whether you understand
why you need to monitor your child's blood sugar at home.
-
Home blood sugar monitoring helps you know how
exercise has affected your child's blood sugar.
-
True
This answer is correct.
Home blood sugar monitoring does help you know how exercise has affected your child's
blood sugar. Checking your child's blood sugar after exercise will help you
know whether blood sugar levels are staying within a safe range.
-
False
This answer is incorrect.
Home blood sugar monitoring does help you know how exercise has affected your child's
blood sugar. Checking your child's blood sugar after exercise will help you
know whether blood sugar levels are staying within a safe range.
Here is a simple way
to get started monitoring your child's blood sugar at home. Use these same
steps to help your child learn this task.
Get organized
Before you start testing your
child's blood sugar:
- Talk with the doctor about how often and when
you should test your child's blood sugar. Use the
blood sugar testing times form to record this information.
- Link
testing your child's blood sugar with other daily activities, such as preparing
for breakfast. This will help your child establish the habit of
self-testing.
- Use the
list of supplies to gather the things you need to test your child's blood
sugar. Keep the supplies together so that a test can be done quickly if
needed.
- Check your equipment before each test.
- Check the expiration date on the testing
strips. If you use test strips after the expiration date on the bottle, you may
not get accurate results.
- Make sure the code numbers on the testing
strips bottle match the numbers on the blood sugar meter. If the numbers do not
match, follow the directions that come with the meter for changing the code
numbers.
- The first time you use a meter, and every time
you switch meters, check the accuracy of your meter's results. Use the sugar
control solution that is made by your meter's manufacturer. Follow the
directions that came with your meter for using the control solution
properly.
- At regular intervals, check the equipment. Put a copy of
the care of blood sugar supplies with your child's bag or
kit to remind you.
Do the test
Some children with type 2 diabetes
need to test their blood sugar level only once or twice a day. Other children,
especially children with
type 1 diabetes, need to test several times a day. The
more often you test your child's blood sugar, the more you will know about how
well his or her treatment is keeping blood sugar within a target range.
Follow these steps when you test your child's blood sugar:
- Wash your hands with warm, soapy water and
dry them well with a clean towel. Have your child wash and dry his or her
hands, also.
- Put a clean needle (lancet) in the pen-sized lancet
device. It holds and positions the lancet and controls how deeply the lancet
goes into the skin.
- Take a test strip from the bottle. Put the lid
back on the bottle immediately to prevent moisture from affecting the other
strips.
- Prepare the blood sugar meter. Follow the manufacturer's
instructions for your specific meter.
- Stick the side of your
child's fingertip with the lancet.
- Put a drop of blood on the
correct spot on the test strip, covering the test area well.
- Using
a clean cotton ball, apply pressure to the place where you stuck your child's
finger to stop the bleeding.
- Wait for the results. Some meters take
only a few seconds. Most meters take less than a minute.
Record the results
Recording your child's blood
sugar results is very important. The doctor will use your child's record to see
how often blood sugar levels have been in a safe range and to determine when
your child's insulin or oral medicine for diabetes needs to be adjusted. Be
sure to take your child's record with you on each visit to the doctor or
diabetes educator.
To record your child's results, you can:
- Get printed blood sugar logs from companies
that make diabetes medicines and supplies.
- Make a blood sugar log
in a notebook. You can record other information in the log or notebook, such as
insulin doses, physical activity, and what your child has
eaten.
- Use a meter that stores the results. Many blood sugar meters
can save from 10 to more than 100 blood sugar results. Some are able to
calculate the average blood sugar for a period of time, such as over a day or a
week. Also, some meter manufacturers make computer programs that can use the
stored results to show patterns in your child's blood sugar levels.
Preventing sore fingers
The more often your
child's blood sugar is tested, the more likely it is your child will have sore
fingertips. Here are some suggestions to help reduce this pain.
- Don't prick the tip of your child's finger.
If you do, the prick will be more painful, and you may not get enough blood to
do the test accurately. Always prick the side of the
fingertip.
- Don't squeeze your child's fingertip. If you have
trouble getting a drop of blood large enough to cover the test area of the
strip, hang your child's hand down below his or her waist and count to 5. Then
squeeze your child's finger beginning closest to his or her hand and moving
outward to the end of the finger.
- Use a different finger each time.
Establish a pattern for which finger you stick so that you won't use some
fingers more than others. If a finger becomes sore, avoid using it for testing
for a few days.
- Use a different device. Some blood sugar meters use
lancet devices that can get a blood sample from sites other than the fingers,
such as the forearm.
- Don't reuse lancets. They get dull and cause
pain.
Test Your Knowledge
Answer the following question to see whether you understand
how to monitor your child's blood sugar at home.
-
To test your child's blood sugar, you need to put a
drop of blood on the special test strip used with the home blood sugar
meter.
-
True
This answer is correct.
To test your child's blood sugar at home, you
need to put a drop of blood on a special test strip. Within seconds to a minute
after you place the test strip into the meter, the meter will provide the
results.
-
False
This answer is incorrect.
To test your child's blood sugar at home, you
do need to put a drop of blood on a special test strip.
Within seconds to a minute after you place the test strip into the meter, the
meter will provide the results.
Now that you have read this
information, you are ready to start monitoring your child's blood sugar levels
at home.
Talk with your child's doctor
If you have questions about this information, take
it with you when you visit your child's doctor. You may want to mark areas or
make notes in the margins where you have questions.
If you haven't
talked with the doctor about when and how often to test your child's blood
sugar, do so during your next visit. Use the
blood sugar testing times form to record the times you need to check your
child's blood sugar each day and when he or she is ill.
Computerized records
Many blood sugar meter manufacturers offer computer software programs
that compile and analyze blood sugar test results on your home computer. You
can print out the results and take them along when you visit your child's
doctor. Some programs allow you to send the information to the doctor
electronically.
Online Resource
| Children With Diabetes |
| Web Address: | www.childrenwithdiabetes.com |
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This Web site is for children with diabetes and for their families.
It offers a variety of information and resources, from basic facts about
diabetes to legal support, as well as school information for students and their
teachers, diabetes camps throughout the United States, chat rooms for children
and for their parents, and a valuable link-site connection to other
diabetes-related Web sites.
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Organization
| American Diabetes Association (ADA) |
| 1701 North Beauregard Street |
| Alexandria, VA 22311 |
| Phone: | 1-800-DIABETES (1-800-342-2383) |
| E-mail: | AskADA@diabetes.org |
| Web Address: | www.diabetes.org |
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The American Diabetes Association (ADA) is a national organization
for health professionals and consumers. Almost every state has a local office.
ADA sets the standards for the care of people with diabetes. Its focus is on
research for the prevention and treatment of all types of diabetes. ADA
provides patient and professional education mainly through its publications,
which include the monthly magazine Diabetes Forecast,
books, brochures, cookbooks and meal planning guides, and pamphlets. ADA also
provides information for parents about caring for a child with diabetes.
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