kayne charlton was 13 years old when he started feeling “off.” the campbell river, b.c. native remembers breaking into a cold sweat over a bowl of breakfast cereal one winter morning and waking up in the middle of the night, thirsty. he had trouble focusing, as if everything around him was fuzzy, and he felt anxious. doctors asked his mom if the teen was on drugs.
his mother, cindy mclean, had another hunch: her son was showing signs of type 1 diabetes, a condition she has lived with since she was six years old. she pricked his finger to test his blood sugar and sure enough, his glucose level was sky-high. they went straight to the hospital and got the official diagnosis.
“like mother like son,” mclean says. “the one thing i didn’t want to give my kids was type 1 diabetes. it was pretty tough getting the news.”
diagnosis often comes as a shock, but for charlton, having grown up watching his mom experience and manage symptoms, he was at least accustomed to what living with the disease is like.
“i knew what i was in for,” says charlton, now 34 living in kelowna, b.c.
omnipod® is especially compatible with kayne’s active lifestyle in kelowna, b.c. in addition to boxing, he enjoys snowboarding, skateboarding and hiking. credit: sarah may photography of campbell river
type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease in which the cells of the pancreas stop producing insulin. insulin is a hormone that helps blood glucose enter the body’s cells for use as energy; without it, glucose can’t travel into cells and ends up accumulating in the bloodstream. high blood glucose can lead to serious complications, and people with type 1 diabetes must take insulin to survive.