RodeoVann wrote:
A few facts.
Type 1 Diabetics stand a 60% chance of being a amputee, a 50% chance of being a double amputee from the age of 7-25, once they hit 50, those percentages go up another 10%. Ron chose to have his 2nd leg amputated because he didn't want to go through what he went through with his first leg, a decision many amputees make simply because of the change in the way they walk or stand commonly causes issues with the other foot in short time. The other point that is never bought up with Ron's first amputation is that 2 years earlier he broke his ankle and developed a Charcot's Joint which made the healing of his ankle impossible, which led to his amputation.
He lived till he was 70, while most medical studies don't do specific studies on this, the number they have out there is 58-65, again, he was 70 when he passed.
When Ron was diagnosed with diabetes's there were no glucose meters, the only way they could test their blood was with a urine test, which wasn't even close to as accurate as the preventive stuff they have out there today. The insulin he took was pork beef insulin, they don't even make that anymore because of its side affects. So like any disease, with time, there are more things to help, but that doesn't help the damage that has been done.
Santo is not the only diabetic to drink, it's frowned upon, but not fatal. Its easy to point at one thing he did and say "that's it, that's why", but as someone who has a beer or two a day, I have never been told to stop, nor have any docs said to me when things came up, "do you drink"? Again, frowned up, but not even near the worse thing you can do.
Santo, like most diabetics "cheated", whether it was drinking, downing a brownie, what have you, but if you manage your blood sugar correctly, maintain a constant diet and exercise, things he must have done due to the age he lived to, you will enjoy a nice life, the things that happened to Ron, happen to a lot of diabetics, the stats prove it.
Its easy for those who might know someone who knows someone is diabetic, have a family member who is, whatever, but you truly don't know unless you have to deal with it day after day after day, it changes your life obviously, you know when the blood sugar is to high or to low, no one else does, its impossible for them too, so while its great to have a opinion, unless your living it, you really don't know.
Great post Vann. Hopefully someone will show it to assbag Bern stine, he likes to deal in facts. I realize that medical degree he received from Duke makes him qualified to opine on the habits of type 1 diabetics and his assurances that Santo wouldve lived to the ripe old age of 90
had he just lived the Dr Danny way.