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18 May 2021 | 22 replies
@Christine Swaidan,Check with your attorney about whether you can ask for verification of the second dog as a service animal.That said, it is possible that one dog was trained to help, for example, a limited vision person operate "independently" (trained to focus on the person's surroundings and alert on perceived dangers) while other dog is trained specifically for either emotional support or for some other condition like detecting when the person is in danger of falling into diabetic coma or some kind of seizure (trained to focus on the person and their behavior without being distracted by the person's surroundings).My $0.02...David J Dachtera
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24 April 2020 | 7 replies
Service animals are guidance for seeing, seizure alert, picking up objects, creating space for those PTSD, detecting anxiety, balance, turning on lights or fetching items and diabetic alert.
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13 January 2024 | 356 replies
The premium expense is based on your age and health status - the young and healthy individuals will have lower premiums compared to older individuals with health conditions (i.e - diabetes, hypertension, etc) for the same 1 million dollar policy.
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18 June 2023 | 152 replies
3) The cashier says "Would you like to donate $5.00 to Diabetes research?
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5 September 2016 | 17 replies
Oh and diabetes doesn't qualify as a disability that requires a service animal LOL.
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10 November 2021 | 686 replies
As a side note, I am one of the folks that is said to be more susceptible to dying from the virus as I have had diabetes for 30 years so I most certainly am aware and do not want to take chances.
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23 November 2017 | 99 replies
Case in point: last year I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
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20 November 2018 | 115 replies
One of the guys in my band is a diabetic, and he yo-yo's in weight, but when he just cuts his carbs (this guy *never* exercises, not even a walk) he drops 15 pounds and has more energy.
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30 September 2021 | 321 replies
Control your weight and Type II Diabetes goes away.
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2 October 2016 | 37 replies
They may be medical alert dogs that warn their owners of impending diabetic crises, seizures, etc.