If your reasons are valid, why would your own Doctor not prescribe this?
The GP has said he does not feel confident about prescribing insulin as he does not know enough about it.You still would be breaching medical practice. You could dicuss it with your friend and ask his advice on how to ask your own doctor. That might be helpful? Maybe your own gp would prescribe it for you. Is there any reason you don't want to ask your own gp?
I'm not a Type 1, but, if you are feeling hypo symptoms at 3.9, I wouldn't have thought that was an enormous cause for concern. Reading patient.co.uk, I see the following:
"
Definition
- Hypoglycaemia is defined as blood glucose <3.0 mmol/L, but below 2.5 mmol/L is considered pathological requiring investigation.[1].............."
http://www.patient.co.uk/doctor/emergency-management-of-hypoglycaemia
Do you have a history of nightmare hypos, with lost awareness?
Previously I would get warning signs of impending hypo at about 5 or just below. The levemir taken before bedtime can often cause me to go low during the night, particularly when Ive missed supper and recently Ive found that my levels are going much lower before I become aware.
You mean this particular insulin?
In general practice you gp would be called on to prescribe insulin for his surgery almost daily?? I think maybe you have misunderstood?
Have you discussed this with your GP, or do you have no confidence in him/her? What makes you feel your friend would have any greater knowledge to prescribe you what you want?
Maybe you could in that case ask your gp for a referral to the hospital clinic where they have more scope to help
Well, it strikes me you need to find a way forward that isn't breaching protocols at best. I doubt your friend would prescribe over your own GP's head, but it's even less likely he will counter a consultant's recommendation. Can you imagine how his insurers would react if anything went wrong and there was a catastrophic event?
If relations with your current hospital have irretrievably broken down, then I would suggest you have to investigate a transfer elsewhere. It seems foolhardy to go along, with a serious, lifelong condition without the imperative benefit of appropriate medical support. I have no idea what the issues were (nor is it any of my business), but I think you have to look for a credible solution that keeps you well within the system. Going "off-piste" is more likely to close avenues and opportunities than to open them.
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