Yes Mo, but think about the purchasing power of the US insurance companies and the NHS as an example, if they were smart as an organisation (they have some very clever people working for them, but that's different) they should be comissioning the research and development of these kind of devices and getting them through trials themselves.Exactly my point. Lots of us would be happy to pay a one-off fee for a super smart meter but no more revenue for the manufacturers. I believe the technology exists to make DB equipment so much better but either too expensive or not lucrative enough for Pharma companies to invest.
Sent from the Diabetes Forum App
I remember the glass syringe back in the mid/late 70's with the disabled car blue screw cap surgical spirit container to keep it in.. The container had a removable flute base so you could stand it upright... You have no idea how many times that glass shattered in transit....
I much prefer my Novopen....
Yeah the stand was detachable as I use to put the container in my coat pocket. The surgical spirit was difficult to get out of the syringe and I swear half the time we were injecting insulin and surgical spirit......
The plastic syringes were a godsend, I was told that I wasn't allowed them on prescription and had to buy them, yet only a few months ago someone said on the forum that their gp did give them on prescription.
When i was about 9 my mum was taken ill, they took a blood sample off her with a big bore plastic syringe with an off set needle... All i was thinking was this is the future..! The Doc even let me play with one at the time without the needle. They wouldn't do that nowadays.. lol
I bought them to start with, but one day the pharmacist said "Do you know you can get these on prescription now?" So I asked my Dr and got them added to my script.The plastic syringes were a godsend, I was told that I wasn't allowed them on prescription and had to buy them, yet only a few months ago someone said on the forum that their gp did give them on prescription.
I bought them to start with, but one day the pharmacist said "Do you know you can get these on prescription now?" So I asked my Dr and got them added to my script.
If anything corresponds medically to the wheel, it must be the disposable plastic syringe.
You don't see many doctors or nurses in hospitals using pen-injectors on patients - for insulin, or anything.
The disposable plastic syringe will continue to be with us, mercifully, until there's an equivalent of the gadget used by Star Trek's Dr McCoy to aerially inject stuff straight through clothing.
Even then, for simplicity's sake, I think I'd stick with the plastic syringe.
I'm sure pens are very good indeed for those who need the convenience of something that already contains insulin..
What I don't like is that everybody who developes diabetes is automatically introduced to its control using a pen-injector, rather than a disposable syringe. And that's a bit like using a fountain pen before you've ever used a pencil.
What's so wrong with pencils? ... sorry, that should be: What's so wrong with plastic syringes?
I believe it's clear. Indeed, I'm pretty sure I saw you write something about it recently. (It may have been earlier in this thread, but I haven't looked.) In an awful lot of people's minds, syringes used outside of a medical environment are associated with illegal drug use.
And that very hard fact is itself, for me, a very good reason to MAKE A POINT of using the ordinary plastic syringe.
I'm shy about injecting in public, if I can avoid it. But I'm not at all shy about the syringe.
And if I had a child who developed diabetes, I'd make a point of ensuring that my child got to know and understand about a simple syringe before introducing the more sophisticated pen-injector.
Noblehead,
I see the Novopen as a more stylish rethinking of the concept on the same old wheel...
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?