It is not true.
As I've said before, it's certainly not our statement that every person with type 1 diabetes needs more than 14 hours a week to manage that disease, but many, if not the majority of us, do. That's even for the activities that are presently allowed under the Income Tax Act and by the CRA guidelines. For example, allowed activities that type 1s must perform daily include testing blood sugar. We do that between six and 10 times on a normal day. That's about five minutes each time. We are allowed to calculate the time it takes for us to calculate and administer doses of insulin. We take a minimum of four injections a day, and that would be on a good day; often it would be more than that. Each time, the calculations and the process of preparing the insulin and taking it would take about five or six minutes. We are permitted to count the time we spend logging blood sugar, and that takes about 15 minutes a day to do well. Then, we are permitted to account for the time we spend analyzing the results, because the patterns in our blood sugar and our responses to insulin tell us what our next dose ought to be. As I mentioned during my remarks, those vary wildly day by day.
Just on those very basic activities—which are by no means all that goes into managing type 1 diabetes—it's very easy to spend an average of two hours a day, 14 hours a week, managing type 1.