Arden on General Hospital?!
Sometime in August I received this heavily blurred image from a Juicebox Podcast listener named Kate Hall…
The image was a call sheet from an upcoming episode of General Hospital.
Click to enlarge
When I was young I would get home from school everyday at 2:55 pm where I would find my mom getting ready to watch GH. Mom would have a hot cup of coffee and be settling in on our ugly sofa as I arrived. One year the show had a storyline about Luke and Laura that was a cultural phenomenon. It stole the attention of everyone with a television, including me. My memory tells me that Luke and Laura had to “hit the road” to find the left-handed boy. I remember a freeze ray that threatened the city of Port Charles. For a time the show became what mom and I did for an hour after school and into the summer where we would run home from a community pool to see the show. There was even a parody song on the radio about the story. You see kids the radio was a thing that…. never mind. But I should at least explain that TV shows happened on a schedule and you had to be near a TV to see them. I digress…
Back to Kate
Kate is a writer on General Hospital (she’s actually a famous soap scribe), she is also the mother of a little girl with type 1 diabetes. And Kate, as fate would have it is a pretty big fan of the Juicebox Podcast.

And that’s how a character named, Assistant District Attorney Jennifer Arden came to be during a recent two-day story arc. ADA Arden is named for Jennifer (Jenny Smith from the Pro Tip episodes of the podcast) and Arden.
Huge thanks to Kate (who will be on the podcast next year) and to General Hospital for the years of entertainment. Here’s a 60 second video of ADA Arden in action (WITH Tristan Rodgers). That’s right, Robert Scorpio! Sorry… my inner child got jacked up there for a moment.
The only thing left is to get one of you to name a baby after me… 🤣

Omnipod DASH Apps are here!
Omnipod DASH Display and VIEW apps are available now for iOS…
The Omnipod VIEW™ app allows users to see the insulin delivery information of friends and loved ones whether they’re in the next room or across the country. Omnipod VIEW™ is an application that allows you to view PDM data and Pod status information from any Podder™ who sends you an invitation. Upon accepting the Podder’s™ invitation, the Viewer can see the Podder’s™ important therapy-related information, such as alerts and alarms, Insulin On Board (IOB), last bolus, last blood glucose reading, current basal program, PDM battery status, and more.
No matter where your Podder™ is, the Omnipod VIEW™ app offers peace of mind by keeping you connected and informed.
“I can’t quite describe how thrilling it is to be able to see my daughter’s Omnipod data on my phone — her IOB, last bolus, basal settings, history, all of it! It’s like having the DASH PDM display right on my phone.”
With the Omnipod VIEW™ app, you can:
• Monitor your Podder’s™ insulin delivery and Omnipod DASH™ System status remotely
• Stay connected on up to 12 Podders™
• Enable notifications to your smartphone about Podder™ status for increased peace of mind
• Use the Omnipod iPhone widget for convenient access to insulin delivery information on the Today View
• Set up the Omnipod VIEW™ app’s iPhone widget next to the Dexcom widget for a quick glance of your Podder’s™ DASH™ PDM and CGM information on a single screen.
Omnipod DISPLAY™ is an application that displays your Omnipod DASH™ System information directly on your iOS smartphone.

Don’t have Omnipod? get a FREE, NO OBLIGATION demo Omnipod sent to your home - try it today!
With the Omnipod DISPLAY™ app, you can:
• Monitor your insulin delivery and Omnipod DASH™ System status conveniently and discreetly from your smartphone.
• Use the Find My PDM feature to quickly locate a misplaced PDM. Note that this feature works within Bluetooth® wireless technology range
• Set up the Omnipod DISPLAY™ app’s iPhone widget next to your Dexcom widget for a quick glance of your DASH™ PDM and CGM information on a single screen.
• Invite up to 12 friends and family members to use the Omnipod VIEW™ application which allows them to view your insulin delivery and Omnipod DASH™ System information on their own smartphones.
Enable Omnipod DASH™ System notifications to your smartphone.
FDA recalls Medtronic 600-series MiniMed insulin pumps
Alert says Medtronic's MiniMed device could malfunction on airplanes
From the Star Tribune: Entire article can be found here
“The problem has long been known. Medtronic first notified patients about the problem in 2017.”
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is reminding patients who use the popular 600-series MiniMed insulin pumps made by Medtronic that the devices contain an issue that could cause their buttons to get stuck while flying or other situations when air pressure changes quickly.
The FDA on Wednesday issued alerts for more than 189,000 MiniMed insulin pumps worldwide. Such pumps are used by diabetic patients who need a steady infusion of the drug insulin to break down the glucose in their blood, in addition to periodic doses (or "boluses") of insulin related to meals, exercise and other factors.
The alerts issued Wednesday are classified by the FDA as a class 2 recall, which is a medium-severity action used when a problem caused by a medical product would be temporary, or when the probability of serious adverse consequences related to the problem is considered remote.
Medtronic has issued an urgent safety notification to patients, which the FDA calls a "recall." However, FDA and Medtronic are not requesting any devices be returned to the manufacturer. The FDA uses the term "recall" to include situations where no product need be returned.
The recalls apply to MiniMed 670G, 640G, 630G, and 620G models, which have physical keypad buttons that can temporarily become "unresponsive" when atmospheric pressure goes up or down quickly around the pump, typically during takeoff and landing.
Read the entire article here
Podder Talk
Thank you to Omnipod for highlighting the Juicebox Podcast in their Father's Day blog post!
Two Podding parents chat about being bold with insulin, not being a diabetes defense attorney, and creating great content that helps people manage their type 1 diabetes.
Check out Amy’s post and the podcast conversation that we had.
Sanofi Insulin Pricing Program
from press release - 4/10/19
Starting in June, Sanofi will further expand its innovative Insulins Valyou Savings Program so people living with diabetes in the United States can pay $99 to access their Sanofi insulins* with a valid prescription, for up to 10 boxes of pens and/or 10 mL vials per month. The expansion of this program helps to address the challenge too many patients face regarding unpredictable and unaffordable pricing for their insulin.
“People living with diabetes in the United States can pay $99 to access their Sanofi insulins* with a valid prescription, for up to 10 boxes of pens and/or 10 mL vials per month.”
People exposed to high out-of-pocket prices at the pharmacy counter can participate in the Insulins Valyou Savings Program regardless of income level. This includes those who are paying high retail prices for their insulin and those who don't qualify for other patient assistance programs.
Under current government regulations, pharmaceutical companies cannot offer this type of program to patients insured under Medicare, Medicaid, or similar federal or state programs, though Sanofi supports changing rules to expand this access program to all those who might benefit.
For more information or to learn how to access this program, visit www.InsulinsValYOU.com.
Additional patient resources available for accessing Sanofi medicines
Sanofi continues to offer other resources to make insulins more accessible including co-pay cards which may limit out-of-pocket expenses sometimes to $0 for all commercially insured patients regardless of income level. In addition, Sanofi offers assistance programs that provide medications, including insulin, at no charge for qualified low-income, uninsured patients through the patient assistance component of the Sanofi Patient Connection program. Together, these programs demonstrate the company's dedication to finding support to help people living with diabetes gain access to the insulins they need.
Sanofi also encourages anyone who is prescribed a Sanofi medicine who may be having financial challenges or trouble navigating their insurance, to call Sanofi Patient Connection at (888) 847-4877 where eligible patients can be connected to the medicines and resources they need at no cost.
* The Insulins Valyou Savings Program does not include Sanofi's combination insulin product.
The entire press release is available here