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Camp Rock: The Final Jam (2010)
Role: Nate
Type: TV Movie
Status: Post-Production
Info: IMDB

JONAS: Season 2 (2010)
Role: Nick Lucas
Type: TV Series
Status: Airing on Disney Channel
Info: Official / IMDB

JONAS LA Sountrack CD (2010)
Release Date: July 20, 2010
Status: In Stores!
Info: Buy It!

Living The Dream 2 (2010)
Role: Himself
Type: Short
Premieres: March 21, 2010
Info: Official / IMDb

Nick Jonas & the Administration: Who I Am CD (2010)
Release Date: February 2, 2010
Status: In Stores!
Info: Buy it!

JONAS: I Heart JONAS - Volume 2 DVD (2010)
Role: Nick Lucas
Release Date: January 26, 2010
Info: IMDB / Buy it!


"Boat Trip"
September 12, 2010
Nick and Macy plan a boat trip for Joe and Stella in an effort to get the two back together. Meanwhile, David Henrie gets Kevin to participate in a celebrity beach challenge. Emily Osmont appears.
OFFICIAL

August 31, 2010 - Cleveland, OH
September 01, 2010 - Detroit, MI
September 02, 2010 - Toronto, ON
September 03, 2010 - Toronto, ON
September 04, 2010 - Montreal, QC
September 05, 2010 - Daytona Beach, FL
September 07, 2010 - West Palm Beach, FL
September 08, 2010 - Tampa, FL
September 10, 2010 - San Antonio, TX
September 11, 2010 - Woodlands, TX
September 12, 2010 - Dallas, TX
September 14, 2010 - Phoenix, AZ
September 16, 2010 - Chula Vista, CA
September 17, 2010 - Wheatland, CA
September 18, 2010 - Mountain View, CA
September 19, 2010 - Irvine, CA

October 21, 2010 - Monterrey, MX
October 23, 2010 - Guadalajara, MX
October 24, 2010 - Mexico City, MX
October 26, 2010 - San Jose, CR
October 28, 2010 - Bogota, CO
October 30, 2010 - Lima, PE

November 02, 2010 - Santiago, CL
November 04, 2010 - Buenos Aires, AR
November 06, 2010 - Sao Paulo, BR
November 07, 2010 - Rio de Janiero, BR
November 09, 2010 - Porto Alegre, BR

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Support Nick J
Nick Jonas is a personable boy of fourteen who happens to be a member of the Jonas Brothers Band, a group of three brothers with a devoted following of very passionate young fans. In November 2005, Nick Jonas found out that he had type 1 diabetes.

A month or two before he was diagnosed, he began to notice “the usual symptoms: losing weight, the bad attitude, being thirsty, going to the bathroom all the time.” He lost about fifteen pounds in two to three weeks, and “it was just insane. I had a terrible attitude, which was totally odd for me because I’m actually a nice person. Especially being on the road around people all the time, you have to keep that positive energy going. And it was hard.”

Nick took some time off from the band’s tour to see a doctor, who packed him off to the hospital immediately when she heard his symptoms. His blood sugar was over 700. “For someone who had no bad medical history ever,” he says, “to suddenly have the shock of diabetes was a bit overwhelming in itself, and then I had to learn all about it, learn all these things in such a short period of time. All of it was crazy. I also wondered if I could continue making music...but I had the support of my friends and the band to be there with me. My dad was back at home with my three other brothers, but my mom stayed at the hospital with me every night.”

The day after Nick left the hospital, he performed in a concert and jumped right back into the flow of doing shows and touring. He started out taking multiple daily injections of NovoLog with Lantus, checking his blood sugar about twelve times a day. He says, “When we were on the road, I’d be in the back of the band trying to give insulin shots and manage my diabetes, and it was just too hard. I was getting frustrated with it. I knew that I needed something different, a solution to the problem, which in fact was the OmniPod [by Insulet]. It’s really changed my life in a big way. I started using it in about April and absolutely loved it. And all my friends think that it’s a really cool device.” He says he was shown other pumps, but he adamantly refused them all because he wanted an OmniPod. He says, “Before I got the OmniPod, I heard about the other ones and they showed me examples and prototypes, but I was like, no, I want this.”

In his OmniPod, Nick uses NovoLog insulin. When he was touring and performing outside at up to 100 degrees last summer, he could set the basal down a little bit so he wouldn’t go low. He reports that he hasn’t had too many episodes of low blood sugar. “The past couple months have been awesome for managing my diabetes, and I’m doing well. My A1c has come down a lot. It is in about the 7% to 8% range, and it was 11% to 12% when I first was diagnosed.”

“What’s awesome about the OmniPod,” Nick says, “is that it works as a FreeStyle meter, so I just put the FreeStyle test strip in it. He tries to check about nine to ten times a day, and his blood sugar is usually 150 to 175 mg/dl. He acknowledges this is high, but because he is so fit and active and has a tendency to go low, this is what he has been advised should be his normal range. His friends are very supportive. “I’ll check my sugar and they’re all concerned, what’s it at right now?” He’s thought about using a continuous monitor and may be using one soon.

Nick doesn’t follow any special diet. He can pretty much eat whatever he wants as long as he makes sure to take the right amount of insulin for it. He is a huge steak eater: “I could eat all the steak in the world,” he says, but “I’ll eat pretty much anything.” He notes that with the OmniPod, he can enter the carbs and it’ll give him a suggested amount of insulin. It also has a food database, in case he ever has a question about how many carbs are in something. When he gets low, he prefers to drink orange juice or some other liquid because they work so quickly.

In March 2007, about a year and a half after his diagnosis, Nick publicly announced that he has diabetes at Carnival For a Cure, in an appearance sponsored by Insulet. He had known from the get-go that he knew he wanted to go public with his diabetes; it was simply a matter of when. He notes that he’s still new to diabetes and feels “like a freshman coming into a senior’s class.” He waited until he felt comfortable with managing his diabetes before telling everyone about it. Of course, he didn’t test in public until after his announcement, but now he tests wherever he is.

As an example of the intense scrutiny to which he is subjected by his fans, there is now a game on line called “Spot the OmniPod, ” in which fans examine old photos of him, trying to spot his pump. Some of them write his name on their arm where he wears it. Everyone in his whole family has a fansite, even his father and his little six-year-old brother.

After Nick announced that he had diabetes, he says, “I found it amazing just how many people know somebody with diabetes or have diabetes themselves. We’d get these stories about how some of the kids were really afraid to tell their friends and how my situation gave them courage to do that. The fact that I’m able to have somewhat of a spotlight to share my story, I just feel blessed.” He carries a supply of guitar picks in his pocket, and “whenever I meet another diabetic buddy as I call them, I give them a pick, a cool little thing.”

Nick appreciates the fact that “I have a platform to be able to share my story. I have this passion to be able to share with young people my age and be a positive light in a situation that might not be so positive. I’ve heard stories about kids who were in depression because after they got diagnosed they were just so upset about what was going on. That just touched my heart, and I wanted to be able to do something about it. I hope that I can be that positive light.”

To read the full story, click here.

Let's help support Nick Jonas and the millions of others out there with Diabetes.

Here's some more information:
Diabetes Research
A Great place to find out what you can do to support Nicholas, and the millions of other people out there with Diabetes.


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