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Home / Education / Family Battles for Teaching Assistant to Ensure Diabetic Student's Safety

Family Battles for Teaching Assistant to Ensure Diabetic Student's Safety

10 Nov

•

Summary

  • Five-year-old Rhys Fewer has asymptomatic Type 1 diabetes, requiring constant monitoring
  • Rhys's family has been homeschooling him for a month due to lack of teaching assistants at his school
  • Rhys's school has 4 full-time students and 2 part-time students who need teaching assistants, but only 1 assistant is available

As of November 10th, 2025, a family in Cape Breton is embroiled in a battle to secure an additional teaching assistant for their 5-year-old son, Rhys Fewer, who suffers from asymptomatic Type 1 diabetes.

Rhys, a primary student at Bras d'Or Elementary School, has been homeschooled for the past month due to his family's concerns for his safety. His grandmother, Corinne Foster, explains that Rhys's class currently has four full-time students who require a teaching assistant, and two more part-time students with the same need will soon be joining the class. However, there is only one teaching assistant available in the classroom.

"I just don't feel like I'm being watched enough," says Rhys, expressing his own worries about the situation. For his family, the lack of someone to actively monitor Rhys's blood sugar levels is a significant problem, as they have already experienced "several mistakes" related to his condition.

Rhys's body is unable to produce the proper amount of insulin, the hormone that lowers blood sugar levels. He requires insulin shots every time he eats and when his levels are too high, as well as a teaching assistant to help him monitor those levels. A device on his arm sends alerts to his phone when his levels are too low or too high, but the family has been concerned about instances where Rhys was left alone with his phone turned off.

Diabetes Canada's Laura O'Driscoll emphasizes the importance of helping young children like Rhys learn to manage their diabetes from an early age. The family has reached out to the school's principal, the minister of education, and the school board, as well as Rhys's pediatrician, who has recommended that Rhys share a teaching assistant with only one or two other students to ensure proper monitoring.

The Cape Breton-Victoria Regional Centre for Education has acknowledged the family's concerns and stated that they are working to find a resolution, committed to ensuring the safety and well-being of all students.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Rhys Fewer, a 5-year-old student in Cape Breton, has asymptomatic Type 1 diabetes, which requires constant monitoring of his blood sugar levels.
Rhys Fewer has been homeschooled for the past month because his family is concerned for his safety at Bras d'Or Elementary School, where there is only one teaching assistant available to monitor multiple students with special needs.
Rhys's class has 4 full-time students and 2 part-time students who require a teaching assistant, but there is only 1 teaching assistant available.

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