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Reflexologist

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

A patient has been seeing you for a number of weeks. He is a diabetic, which means his pancreas doesn't produce enough insulin on its own. He takes insulin daily with a hypodermic needle to supplement his body's production of the chemical. This is standard procedure for many diabetics. He also has to watch his intake of sugary foods.

Your patient has come to you because he wants to get off the insulin injections. You believe you can help him do that.

You have been stimulating his pancreas through your treatments and now it is starting to produce more insulin. The problem is, your patient is not monitoring his diet and he still loves those doughnuts. This has caused his insulin levels to fluctuate, both above and below safe levels. He's feeling dizzy because of it. He can't stop the insulin injections yet because his body still isn't producing enough of a steady supply on its own.

At this point, you are uncomfortable with the situation. With the insulin he is already taking, your success in stimulating his pancreas could cause a serious seizure. You want to help him, not kill him.

You want to continue the treatment but you can't seem to get him to cooperate. You stress to him the importance of monitoring his diet and insulin intake. He badly wants to get off the injections. You really want to help him. What do you do?

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