TerriH
Active Member
- Messages
- 37
- Location
- South East Wales
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
- Dislikes
- Noise, hooligan drivers and most of all rude, selfish and totally inconsiderate people.
Thank you but I do all this. When I go hypo however I lose consciousness and my husband has to try and feed me glucose tablets until I come round. These tablets are always at our bedside as well as other carbs but what else can we do????Thank you
Terri, that sounds very frightening and surely if it's happening every night, that is a potentially life threatening situation? Going unconscious???? I would be down that Doctors pronto for extra testing or whatever. Then at least they can try different insulin or help you adjust or whatever, your poor husband too!!! xThank you but I do all this. When I go hypo however I lose consciousness and my husband has to try and feed me glucose tablets until I come round. These tablets are always at our bedside as well as other carbs but what else can we do????
Thank you very much for your help.I used to get bad night hypos. With insulatard by itself.
Now I have tresiba and insulatard!! I have just 1.5 tresiba late afternoon and and odd routine compared to most by using insulatard at 3.30am and 7/8am.
However its the best regime I've had. It was me that suggested it after basal testing and then lining up actions of various insulins peak acting times against what I needed...
I have 1.5 of tresiba somewhere between 4-6pm. Insulatard is split in to two doses and equates in total to 15 units, plus I also need a bolus to get up out of bed...
Thank you very much for your help.
TerriH
My consultants could not help with levels to be honest... there actions are from text books and manufacturing recommendations.
The pump for me, worked fantastic for 5 years and then my skin started to block cannulas when first put in. So I had no alternative but to go back to mdi, which didnt work well for me as I was put on pump when they werent freely given to T1 s.
After researching my needs then it was me that found this alternative. Staff not like split insulatard, not like tresiba as well... but I wasnt happy. So looking at how various insulins work and graphing them on greaseproof paper and laying them over my good n bad times for levels I figure this was best way for me.
Last appt with consultant and he said that I was just to carry on playing around with the various insulins myself.
I have been lucky that I have had a funded CGM and tjis has allowed and still allows me to have a much better idea about changing doses etc...
For me insulatard is pretty much out of my body by midnight, which is when it needs to be gone... but without something in a small dose running in background then from midnight I would climb and 3.30 onwards was just dire. Tresiba by itself was not an option as it was so flat in delivery. So insulatard given at 3.30 keeps level... and is working at its peak for 4-8 hours when I need it. Having a further 1/3rd of total dose at 7/8am allows for my activitys to change from mornings to afternoons. I always need less in afternoons.so splitting it made sense to me.. and to put majority of dose of insulatard when I needed it. Still need 1 or 1.5 bolus to get up but that is then also out of my body by afternoons when I dont need it.
We are all individual and consultants/staff cannot fine tune our needs in a 15 minute appt... no hope....
Working/ weekends etc are less of a problem now too.
I agree but here in S E Wales I do not even have a diabetic consultant and practice nurses who carry out the Annual Reviews know next to nothing so I completely understand you trying different things re. insulin on your own. Thank you for your thoughts and Good Luck!!
TerriH
I’m in South Wales, under the Cwm Taf board. If you ask your GP to have your care at a hospital because you’re having these hypos, they have to transfer you. You definitely need more than a DSN.I agree but here in S E Wales I do not even have a diabetic consultant and practice nurses who carry out the Annual Reviews know next to nothing so I completely understand you trying different things re. insulin on your own. Thank you for your thoughts and Good Luck!!
TerriH
I agree entirely but it is 2 years since I saw a diabetic consultant and if I get to see one within 2 years I will be very surprised as the waiting list is 2 years now.. To illustrate how bad the situation is I have spent 3 hours trying to speak to my GP without any success at all and I feel that if I did or could not self manage as best I can, I would be long since dead.I lived in S Wales for 3 years in Carmarthen. I had one particularly good dsn and a temporary pump consultant.. and 1 horrible consultant!!
Personally I prefer finding my own way
.. I see consultants as people that can give some rext book knowledge and change insulins/give pumps/ and back you for CGM funding but day to day we are the people that have to find our own ways...
A great person on here when I have struggled with consultants or diabetes educators told me the best way to think... and spot on..."they are the specialists, but we are the experts"... absolutely the best confidence giver to me... gave me the confidence back again that I had lost...
Good luck, but dont give in. You know your body....
You should have a consultant though... a consultant specialising in diabetes is a must.. even if they have no answers... they have the ability to prescribe and give pumps etc which gp practices and nurses dont..
I agree but with the new system of "askmyGP" which has recently been introduced here, I can stay on the telephone (and already have done) for 3 hours trying to speak to my GP, turn up at the surgery and get nowhere fast. Since there is a 2 year wait to see a diabetic consultant, I HAVE to manage as best I can on my own.I’m in South Wales, under the Cwm Taf board. If you ask your GP to have your care at a hospital because you’re having these hypos, they have to transfer you. You definitely need more than a DSN.
Thank you I already do this and do a BM test before going to bed.@TerriH sorry to hear about that all I can suggest is eating a bedtime snack and keeping a sugary drink beside your bed
Blimey, that’s appalling!I agree but with the new system of "askmyGP" which has recently been introduced here, I can stay on the telephone (and already have done) for 3 hours trying to speak to my GP, turn up at the surgery and get nowhere fast. Since there is a 2 year wait to see a diabetic consultant, I HAVE to manage as best I can on my own.
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