My 9 year old boy was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes when he was 4. I'm an occasional lurker to this forum but thought I might be able to help a little with this post, even if I am a bit late to the game
My wife is pushing for the medic-alert bracelet or necklace. I agree with her, but I'm not sure at 7 that he's mature enough to wear it properly all the time. Right now it seems more likely to end up shoved under the bed...
I wouldn't hesitate with getting the medic-alert tag. My son has been wearing one since shortly after his diagnosis and it is an unquestioned part of what he wears at all times. For your child's age, I'd stick with the bracelet style though ... the sport bracelet (nylon & velcro) seems to work best. My son has only recently moved to a dog-tag style.
Same thing with the insulin pump... He's basically not ready for it yet, as the program doctors want him to graduate to a basal/bolus injection protocol and see that he can handle that for a while before they consider the pump. I'm just glad we have good insurance with my wife's federal job -- those insulin pumps are $5K and up.
My son absolutely hates the idea of the pump, but from what I understand it is a great piece of technology for kids whose glucose level is really hard to control. I agree its something to consider in the coming years, but not something to worry about right now. I know how big the learning curve is, best to stick with the basics now!
You are very blessed to have insurance for this all, given the cost I know I'd have a much harder time without the coverage I have.
It sounds like you have a good support system with the hospital too. We also have a great programme at our Children's Hospital here for which I am incredibly grateful.
We have two of the Glucagon red injectors, one went to the school. Two more should be coming later this month. Those injectors are expensive too -- $175. We might have to game the system abit to get a hold of a few more of them. It seems like something I'd like to keep in my emergency kit.
One word of caution, the Glucagon injectors only have shelf life of one year.
Thanks for the advice about the glucose tabs. We've been using apple juice but it seems like common sense that nobody is going to confuse labeled tablets for candy!
Originally we used candies or fruit leathers but have eventually moved to the Dex4 tabs. For whatever reason, my son stopped responding well to those other sugars and they just wouldn't raise his blood sugar level enough to get him out of the low. The Dex4 work great now, but I'd say use what works (if you do use candies or something more "common" I would recommend pre-packaging them in per-serving baggies - its much easier).
Also, get your boy to start carrying his necessities with him. I (or my wife) carry needles or insulin if needed, but my son carries his meter, strips & Dex4 tablets himself ... we started this habit right away too. He uses a little caribbeaner on his meter pouch (his "kit") and hooks it onto his belt loop. He either carries the tablets with the meter or in a pocket. Not that we haven't run into issues with forgetting things, but ultimately it seems best.
Another piece of gear we've found helpful is a watch with multiple alarms. He has a Casio Baby-G which has 5 alarms which are set for each of his snack/meal times except breakfast. Its a good tool to keep us all on track. I also set my own watch to go off when its time for his night-time needle.
As someone else mentioned, Diabetic camps for kids are great. My guy was finally old enough to go to one last year and it was an incredibly positive experience.
Another point made earlier was to get his teachers involved. Every year we sit down with our son's teacher right before the school year begins and educate her on what type 1 diabetes is and what my son needs to do to manage it while at school. The Canadian Diabetes Association publishes a document called
Kids with Diabetes in your Care which is very helpful for this (I'm pretty sure I've seen an American version too). This has always been a very positive experience.
I'm likely forgetting some useful tidbits, so if you have any other questions at all feel free to ask away!