Not really, just wondering if Tresiba it is worth giving Tresiba a try.I've only been on Levemir. Are you encountering problems that make you want to change?
Thanks, I inject Levemir only once a dayBecause Levemir is shorter acting, it is more flexible. By splitting the daily dose between morning and evening shots, the level of insulin action across the 24 hour cycle can be customised. Tresiba injected in the morning would make me go low in the early hours of the morning on the next day. I would stick with Levemir, but many people are happy with Tresiba. You just have to try it it and see what happens. Being only one shot a day is an advantage too.
You are probably making a fair amount of your own insulin. If flexibility with Levemir is not important, by all means try something different. Tresiba is probably a better once-a-day insulin. I would get just one pen or cartridge and see how it works.Thanks, I inject Levemir only once a day
Pharmacists provide whatever is in the prescription.Insulin is typically available in a box of five cartridges or five pens. I have never known a pharmacist to be able to split this. ...
Dispensing is very controlled here in NZ and also in SA. The pharmacist works out the requirement based on the daily number of units prescribed. If for example it worked out 6.5 cartridges, 1 box and two lose cartridges are provided. That your insulin is required for backup purposes and a daily unit requirement is not specified may confuse the issue. For backup purposes, you only need 1 cartridge once every few years. Would getting a daily requirement specified in the prescription make a difference?Not in my experience. Pharmacists will not break into a packet if they think they will be unable to dispense the remainder.
My prescription was for one cartridge of NovoRapid. Multiple pharmacists refused to dispense it. Eventually, the prescription was changed to a whole box. Otherwise, I was not able to get any backup pen cartridges.
I know that's never happened for me in the UK, mine just has 'As Directed' on it. the amount I use in a day can vary immensely anyways, at one end of the scale I could have 18, the other end could be about 40ish (ok that's generally for really carby days, or days when I'm ill and I need a lot more)The pharmacist works out the requirement based on the daily number of units prescribed