Page 13 - Flathead Beacon // 4.6.16
P. 13
community banking...
What does it mean to you?
“C ommunity banking means being listened to.” - Michael G.
www.ThreeRiversBankMontana.com
NEWS
Bringing Diabetes to the Fore
Ra e o ers six “dream vacations” with funds raised going to diabetes awareness, the Lions Club, and a local food bank
co
BY MOLLY PRIDDY OF THE BEACON
For many parents, the day their rst child is born is a day of overwhelm- ing love and a new type of anxiety they were not aware of before, that this tiny, squirming baby is theirs to protect and nurture.
For Danni and Alex Weinstein, those massive new feelings were compounded with an enormous sense of relief that their daughter Isabella Marie nally made it to the world seven months ago.
As a person living with Type-1 diabe- tes, Danni Weinstein’s pregnancy was one of high and lows dictated by how much her body could take. She had to stop working at 28 weeks, and performed weekly checks on her system, including using an automatic glucose monitor to keep track of her sugar levels that could sometimes hide behind hormone shifts.
“We were pretty much told it would be really hard for me to carry a baby,” Wein- stein said. “It was the most stressful time in my life. When she was nally born, it was the best day.”
Diabetes is one of the most preva- lent diseases a ecting Americans, with nearly 26 million people across the coun- try battling it. Of those people, more than 7 million are unaware they have diabe- tes, according to the American Diabetes Association, and another 79 million peo- ple at high risk for developing the disease.
In an e ort to increase awareness in the Flathead Valley, the Lions Club along with the Diabetes Care and Prevention Center at Kalispell Regional Medical Center, are holding a year-long Dream Vacation ra e.
Only 300, $100 tickets will be sold, the trips include a seven-night West- ern Caribbean cruise; roundtrip airfare, lodging and tickets to either a Seahawks or Broncos NFL game; a three-night roundtrip to New York City; a four-day trip with lodging, passes, and airfare to Disneyland; three nights in Washington DC with a night tour of the monuments; and a seven-night Alaskan cruise.
There will be one drawing each month for a di erent vacation, starting in May. And even if a winner’s ticket is selected in June, for example, their ticket is put back into the pot for the rest of the draw- ings, providing the possibility of winning more trips.
Colleen Karper, RN CDE and man- ager of diabetes education and preven- tion at KRMC, said her program works with people with Types 1 and 2 diabe- tes, as well as those with gestational or pre-diabetes.
Dani Weinstein holds her 7-month-old daughter Isabella.
GREG LINDSTROM | FLATHEAD BEACON
Her educators help people manage liv- ing with the disease and how to take care of themselves properly. The program has been recognized through Medicare since 2001.
The proceeds earned from the ra e will be split three ways, with equal shares going to the Lions Club, a local food bank, and to the Kalispell Regional Healthcare Diabetes Fund, which helps people with diabetes pay for their treatment as well as pays for the organization’s needs, such as bringing in a pediatric specialist for a week or buying equipment not allotted for within the budget.
It’s important to spread awareness, Karper said, because the earlier it is detected, the less unmitigated damage it can do to a body.
Weinstein, now 28, was diagnosed with Type-1 diabetes at age 6, when her pancreas largely shut down. With this form of the disease, the body doesn’t pro- duce insulin, which is needed to get glu- cose from the bloodstream into the cells of the body.
Glucose is important for many organs and muscles but especially for the brain, which lacks fuel storage and needs a con- tinuous supply of the simple sugar since it acts as the brain’s fuel.
Both Weinstein’s father and older brother have Type 1 diabetes, so her mother was alert for the signs she noticed in her 6-year-old daughter: frequent uri- nation, constant thirst, and weight loss.
“My pancreas basically gave out on me,” she said.
But her disease didn’t stop Weinstein from achieving her dreams. She began playing tennis, and started competing
at 9. While attending White sh High School, then under her maiden name as Danni Paulson, Weinstein went unde- feated, 77-0 through all four years.
She met her future husband at tennis camp when she was a freshman in high school, living in California for a year. She transferred back to White sh the next year, and Alex moved to White sh for his senior year of high school.
They both played Division 1 tennis at the University of Montana, and were married in 2012.
Playing a sport at that level for so long is hard on a body already trying to handle diabetes; Weinstein remembers choking down sugar packets to prep her body for practice, setting o a chain reaction of high blood sugar and then ensuing dips.
Pregnancy wasn’t even on the radar, she said, because they’d been told it wouldn’t work for her. Isabella came about as a surprise.
“The day we found out, we were on another planet,” Weinstein said, “but equally scared.”
Living with diabetes means constantly keeping an eye on her body’s functions, but it can also present challenges in the community when people don’t under- stand the disease.
Type 1 diabetes is genetic, whereas Type 2 comes about as a result of genetics and lifestyle choices. The two are often confused, Weinstein said.
“People with diabetes can look com- pletely ne,” Weinstein said. “[Others] don’t realize the toll it takes on your body, day in, day out.”
There’s also the idea that it’s not that serious of a disease because people who have can “just treat it with a shot,” Weinstein said, which is a simplistic and potentially dangerous view, since it could determine how someone might treat a person slipping into a diabetic coma.
Overall, Weinstein said she’s happy with how far she’s pushed her body, and is proud of her achievements. But the more people learn about the disease, it will be easier to spot early on, or even cured.
“It seems like everybody I know knows someone with diabetes,” Weinstein said. “We need a cure, we need to save lives.”
Tickets for the Dream Vacation ra e
can be found at www.lionsdreamvaca-
tion.org, by calling the Kalispell Lions
Club at 406-871-4176, by visiting the
Diabetes Care and Prevention Center at
430 Windward Way, or at Montana Bro-
kers Real Estate at 685 Sunset Blvd in
Kalispell. www.T
mpriddy@ atheadbeacon.com
APRIL 6, 2016 // FLATHEADBEACON.COM
13
b p
h