victor pons ginstar said:
is not the same disability as disability that is something that prevents you from doing your work normally and that is what we have the diabetics day by day for the one who has their jobIt is already very easy, but for which I seek work I already said it once and I say it again is a difficult or almost impossible mission 33% and until 1988 they gave you the 33% disability for being diabetic, For something I would be saying, I want to work and 33% would open many doors in the labor market I think so whom it scratches.Diabetes closes you door because you want.You do not have to say that you are diabetic, only in the medical examination but the mutuals cannot say or talk about diseases to companies, they only emit suitable or not suitable.
I do the same work as before being diabetic and I am better than other colleagues who are not and are discharged every 2x3 for anxiety, stress or hypertension attacks.
In fact I am looking for work to change myself and in no interview they ask me about health, but equally lying, as well as when I play renewing the driving card.According to the Statute of the Worker, those who have a continuous day of 7-8 hours are entitled to 20 min of rest.I work by game so I have no right to rest, but they allow me to have a 10 min coffee in the morning and another in the afternoon;It is getting up to the machine and sitting back on my site with coffee, a cookie or what you want to eat.
I work in an office (total sedentary), but if it were in a very dynamic line or work, I would use less insulin, breakfast a lot of protein and my stop would be a good sandwich and try to be about 140mg/dl to avoid hypos;In my free time I would compensate for values.I have been in production a few months, at the foot of the cannon and with that dynamic it went well.