| I'm puzzled at how this would be any different from a normal hotel. Firstly, most hotels don't have a restaurant in them. Those that do, are fancy, and offer a large variety of options of food. There will always be something a diabetic can eat in a variety of ways.
Secondly, if you wantt o talk about Fitness, most hotels offer a fitness center. I can't think of any in our city (we have 18 currently in 7.7 square miles with 2 more being built soon) that do not offer a fitness center except for the cheapo ones (Red Roof Inn comes to mind first.)
I just don't see how this would be any different than a normal hotel.
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●Blue Ash, Ohio Police Dispatcher
●Type 1 diabetic for 25 years (11 months old)
●Animas pumper since December of 2002
~IR 1000 (Dec. 2002-Jan. 2005)
~IR 1200 (Jan. 2005 - ?)
●LifeScan OneTouch UltraSmart Diabetes is an Art, NOT a Science. You must master the control by skills and not by knowledge alone. |