Plane Stranger Helped Diagnose Caitlin Neelley's Type 1 Diabetes at Age 11 After 500 mg/dL Reading
Updated
Updated · Newsweek · Jun 27
Plane Stranger Helped Diagnose Caitlin Neelley's Type 1 Diabetes at Age 11 After 500 mg/dL Reading
1 articles · Updated · Newsweek · Jun 27
Summary
Thanksgiving Day testing found Caitlin Neelley's blood sugar at around 500 mg/dL after her mother rushed the 11-year-old to urgent care and then the ER, where she was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes.
A stranger seated near Neelley on a holiday flight had urged her mother to get her tested after hearing about extreme thirst, weakness and nearly 10 bathroom trips — symptoms he recognized after losing his wife and daughter to the disease.
Her family had initially attributed the fatigue to her being an active child and competitive dancer, but relatives noticed she looked thinner and a bedwetting episode that night deepened concern.
Neelley, now 22 and living in Fort Lauderdale, shared the story on TikTok to highlight that Type 1 diabetes is a lifelong autoimmune disease — not caused by sugar or parenting — and can affect both children and adults.