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Our Goal
Our primary goal is to raise at least $7500 for Heaven Scent Paws. If we exceed our goal, the additional funds raised will go to further their organization's purpose, and help place other Diabetic Service Dogs with other children and adults with Type I Diabetes and their families. Check back here frequently as we update our progress towards our goal! We will try to update this area of the website on a weekly basis! Additionally, in the process of this fundraising we would like to help educate the general public on Type I Diabetes and the impact it has on the individual who has it and their families and loved ones. We'd also like to get the word out there that there is such a thing as a Diabetic Service Alert Dog, who can sense hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia. The more we can educate, the better! More information on Type I Diabetes From the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation website: Type 1 diabetes often develops in children, adolescents, and young adults, so it's sometimes called "juvenile diabetes." Diabetes is not contagious. You cannot catch diabetes from someone who has it. Researchers continue to study how and why diabetes occurs in certain children and families. Although diabetes cannot be cured, it can be controlled. About Blood Sugar Levels In people without diabetes, the pancreas maintains a "perfect balance" between food intake and insulin. When a person eats, the pancreas puts out the exact amount of insulin needed to turn the glucose into energy. If the person eats a lot, the pancreas puts out a lot of insulin. If the person eats just a little, the pancreas puts out just a little insulin. Insulin Needs People with type 1 diabetes often struggle to determine how much insulin to inject. In a simple and perfect world, this question would have an easy answer (e.g. always eat a certain amount of food and inject a certain amount of insulin). However, in reality there is no way to know how much insulin to inject with 100% accuracy. Many factors influence how much insulin people need to get to the desired "perfect balance" of glucose and insulin. These factors include foods with different absorption rates as well as the effects of stress, illness, and exercise. Also, as children grow, their insulin needs change. Since determining how much insulin the body needs to "balance" the amount of glucose is really a best guess, sometimes the guess is inaccurate and high or low blood sugar results. Risk of Complications
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