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Kiki's Kids Camp Helps Children with Diabetes
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Kiki's Kids Camp Helps Children with Diabetes

06.10.2022

Camaraderie, Education Go Hand in Hand

​ROME, Ga., June 10, 2022 Many of the kids at Kiki's Kids Camp – ­a four-day summer camp for youth diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes – are already pros when it comes to managing their diabetes. If they are not, the camp works to make sure they all become experts.

This year's edition of Kiki's Kids Camp ended Thursday at Darlington School's Huffman Athletic Center. Campers enjoyed traditional activities along with educational sessions designed to help them live healthy. Blood sugar levels were checked throughout the session to ensure their safety and to teach them how to monitor themselves when they are at home or school. Lessons also included good eating habits.

Miriam Loveless, camp director, said watching the kids learn and share is one of the reasons she keeps coming back.

“They'll do educational presentations and it's amazing to watch them share. It's really moving to see them together in an atmosphere where they know they will feel accepted," said Loveless, who is also a school counselor at East Central Elementary School in Rome.

Loveless brings a unique perspective to the camp. She was in her 40s when she discovered she has Type 1 diabetes, which usually reveals itself much earlier in life.

That was the case for 13-year-old Emily Baker of Rome, who has been attending the camp for 8 years. This year was her first as a counselor in training.

“The camp is fun, and I know I can help some of the other kids," Emily said.

Kiki's Kids is funded by a planned gift from the estate of the late Angelique (Kiki) Petropole, a Rome pediatric nurse who had diabetes. The gift continues to fund the camp and the purchase of diabetes supplies for children in need.

Because of her work, her love for children, and her own personal experience with diabetes, Kiki decided to create a trust fund to provide encouragement and financial support to children with diabetes. Her gift is managed by Floyd Healthcare Foundation.

 

​About Atrium Health Floyd
Since 1942, Floyd, now Atrium Health Floyd, has worked to provide affordable, accessible care in northwest Georgia and northeast Alabama. Today, Atrium Health Floyd is a leading medical provider and economic force. As part of the largest, integrated, nonprofit health system in the Southeast, it is also able to tap into some of the nation's leading medical experts and specialists with Atrium Health, allowing it to provide the best care close to home – including advanced innovations in virtual medicine and care. At the hub of these services is Floyd Medical Center, a 304-bed full-service, acute care hospital and regional referral center. Atrium Health Floyd employs more than 3,400 teammates who provide care in over 40 medical specialties at three hospitals: Floyd Medical Center in Rome, Georgia; Floyd Cherokee Medical Center in Centre, Alabama; Floyd Polk Medical Center in Cedartown, Georgia, as well as Floyd Behavioral Health Center, a freestanding 53-bed behavioral health facility, also in Rome; and a primary care and urgent care network with locations throughout the service area of northwest Georgia and northeast Alabama.