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Halloween Screamers!

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Halloween is coming up (spooky!) and we want you to share with us some of the spookiest and terrifying devices of diabetes past.

Whether its pictures of your old equipment or something you've found online... we want to see them!

worst_lancet_device.jpg


We will start you off with the lancing device called The Guillotine. Seeing this picture makes us VERY appreciative of how far development has come
 
Well, we used to use "The Guillotine" not that many years ago in nursing. I retired 7 years ago and it was still being used then!!!!
 
How about this one... 'The Palmer Injector', Glasgow, Scotland, 1955-1965

hommedia.ashx


chills your bones!!
 
And these
 

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Administrator said:
Halloween is coming up (spooky!) and we want you to share with us some of the spookiest and terrifying devices of diabetes past.

Whether its pictures of your old equipment or something you've found online... we want to see them!

worst_lancet_device.jpg


We will start you off with the lancing device called The Guillotine. Seeing this picture makes us VERY appreciative of how far development has come


Still have nightmares about that contraption, hurt like hell it did!!!!!!
 
Dodo said:
And these

:shock: Its not just the length of the old needles look at how much thicker
the steel was :shock: :shock:

How they must have "hurt" !!!
 
I remember a nurse had no idea how to load the lancet so used to just use a needle! Her little prick was more like using a sword! I swear it nearly went right through my finger!


Sent from the Diabetes Forum App
 
When I was diagnosed 20 years ago they didn't have a lancet devise in hospital, so I was just give a lancet to hold to stab my finger with! ..more psychologically challenging that using a devise, especially when your just getting used to injecting etc! OUCH


Sent from the Diabetes Forum App
 
Gaah, I've been diagnosed T1 for 20 years and started out using old-style syringes... that picture of the needle compared to the new screw-on microfine type is terrifying!! :shock:
 
I can remember the first time I saw a novopen needle - I couldn't believe how small it was. The joy!:D. There are few enough bright sides to diabetes but I am grateful to have gotten it after disposable syringes became available. Even those needles seem as nothing to old style needles that came with glass syringes that I have seen. Squirm!:shock:

Sent from the Diabetes Forum App
 
The number of times the needle would shoot off the end of the syringe when using the injector gun and lodge in my thigh!
 
OMG! Thanks to everyone who's posted, I've used all of the horrors shown, including glass syringes and that revolting urine testing kit with the huge tablets and glass test tubes! Yuk!!! In the end my mother decided she couldn't risk using the Palmer injector as so much insulin was lost when the needle worked loose that she never knew how much of the dose I'd actually had.

I'm now a happy bunny using an insulin pump and hoping to borrow a CGM for a week or so - goodness, how things have changed!!
 
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