A diabetic desperation led to creation of new medical emergency kits

Spanishchef.net recommends these products

diabetic

A diabetic desperation led to creation of new medical emergency kits

DRAPER — Someone had used spray-paint to emblazon “DIABETIC” on the rooftop where a group was stranded in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

“It was a really hopeless, helpless feeling for me,” Jennifer Lindley said about seeing the image on the news. “I didn’t know what to do for him.”

Lindley, who is a Type 1 diabetic and has a son with the same condition, also felt a sense of desperation herself and began scouring the Internet for emergency supplies to keep in her own home, in case of an emergency.

Jennifer Lindley, a Type 1 diabetic, talks about her emergency diabetic kit that she is selling through her company, Essential Preparedness Products, in Draper Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2011.

“We have all the supplies on hand, but we don’t have them organized and so you’d have to pick and grab everything to go, if you were in an evacuation situation,” she said.

The experience sparked an idea that has led to the mass production of emergency diabetic kits, as well as other kits to assist people with other chronic illnesses, including asthma and heart problems.

“I wanted it to be something that everyone could feel that they could buy, because it is a necessity. It’s not a luxury item,” Lindley said.

Her new company, Essential Preparedness Products, which is based in American Fork, assembles and sells the kits, officially called a med-Ecase, for $69.99, plus shipping costs. Five percent of the proceeds, Lindley said, go to the American Diabetic Association and the Juvenile Diabetic Research Foundation, because “that is really where my passion is.”

Lindley, who has served on the board of directors for the JDRF, said the group has made a huge difference in the lives of diabetics around the world, and she hopes the emergency kits do the same.

“It doesn’t matter if you live in a disastrous-type area on the hurricane coast, or in Tornado Alley, or in an earthquake zone, personal disasters happen all the time,” she said, adding that when her own insulin pump quit working earlier this year, Lindley had to rely on the supplies in her emergency kit, a prototype she had been carrying around at the time.

“I had to go through my log book and read how to convert everything over to shots and I had to go back to the basics of diabetes for five days,” she said. “It definitely made me understand the use and the reasons why we need this case.”

The Diabetic med-Ecase comes with foam inserts to customize the kit for both Type 1 and Type 2 diabetics, as well as miscellaneous compartments for pills and/or syringes. It is also equipped with an ice pack to preserve insulin potency throughout the duration of an emergency situation.

However, Lindley said she doesn’t recommend keeping insulin in the waterproof, air-tight pack all the time, even if the kit is being used on a daily basis.


Diabetes & Diabetic Recipes with Bill & Sheila

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • PDF
  • RSS
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • del.icio.us
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Leave a Reply