Panic
Member Since 2019
I'm going to be gone for about 10 days in October and am preparing a guide for my friend who is watching my sugar baby. She has no experience caring for a diabetic cat so I was making up a blood testing guide for her to reference as far as giving insulin depending on her numbers. I was thinking something like listing pre-recorded adjustment doses, something like this:
Below 200 - skip (if number doesn't rise) or give 10% less insulin (if number rises after stalling)
201 to 240 - 10% less to be on the safe side
241 and up - full dose
This is generalized (and based on my own cat's records) but basically I'd want to cater the guide to keeping the cat safe outside my care, which may mean running her a little high to avoid running too low.
If it were me I could maintain full doses and monitor in the lower 200s, but she's doing me a favor and I don't want to put the two of them in risky situations (or inconvenience my friend). I basically just want to avoid any potential hypos since I won't be there, but I also don't want to screw up her cycles by giving such a range of potential lowered doses. Thoughts? Does anyone have suggestions for when they let others cat-sit their sugar babies?
Below 200 - skip (if number doesn't rise) or give 10% less insulin (if number rises after stalling)
201 to 240 - 10% less to be on the safe side
241 and up - full dose
This is generalized (and based on my own cat's records) but basically I'd want to cater the guide to keeping the cat safe outside my care, which may mean running her a little high to avoid running too low.
If it were me I could maintain full doses and monitor in the lower 200s, but she's doing me a favor and I don't want to put the two of them in risky situations (or inconvenience my friend). I basically just want to avoid any potential hypos since I won't be there, but I also don't want to screw up her cycles by giving such a range of potential lowered doses. Thoughts? Does anyone have suggestions for when they let others cat-sit their sugar babies?
