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<blockquote data-quote="Super Kami Guru" data-source="post: 8735" data-attributes="member: 22"><p>I watched the first three minutes of that video and, having been in that exact situation that Mr. Graham was in, I can understand both sides perfectly. I know when I have a severe low blood sugar situation, I get very iffy. I make no sense, I feel like I can't control any of my own actions, and I just generally know that something is very wrong, but otherwise, it's paranoia time. So while I would love for there to be a way for diabetics to communicate that situation to people when we're in it, there simply isn't. Tough situation for both sides there...I'd love to say "well just call the EMTs and get him some glucagon," but I'm not sure if cops are trained on diabetic extreme lows, and how do you get the "suspect" to calm down until they arrive? I feel for the diabetic, and I feel for the cop in that situation. Tough one.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Super Kami Guru, post: 8735, member: 22"] I watched the first three minutes of that video and, having been in that exact situation that Mr. Graham was in, I can understand both sides perfectly. I know when I have a severe low blood sugar situation, I get very iffy. I make no sense, I feel like I can't control any of my own actions, and I just generally know that something is very wrong, but otherwise, it's paranoia time. So while I would love for there to be a way for diabetics to communicate that situation to people when we're in it, there simply isn't. Tough situation for both sides there...I'd love to say "well just call the EMTs and get him some glucagon," but I'm not sure if cops are trained on diabetic extreme lows, and how do you get the "suspect" to calm down until they arrive? I feel for the diabetic, and I feel for the cop in that situation. Tough one. [/QUOTE]
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