Chloesnavy
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 274
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
A pump works by drip feeding you fast acting insulin all the time. The constant drip feed is your basal rate, then when you eat you tell the pump how many grams of carbs you are eating and it works out a bolus for you.
The pumps just another tool for managing diabetes. The user still has to do all the thinking and tell the pump what to do.
It can be a bit of work to get basal rates right and to get your head around different bolus options from a pump.
I think the work is worth it and a pump does offer more options for diabetes management as you can set a basal rate exactly how you want it hour by hour (great if you have dawn phenomenon) and you can make much more accurate use of insulin to carb ratios as pumps go up/down in much smaller increments that half a unit, mine does 0.05 units, I think some pumps do 0.025 units, so you can do micro bolusing for corrections. And it's always on so always handy for bolusing. Then there's temporary basal rates that make the basal much more flexible to what you need.
Here's a page of info on pumps - http://www.diabetes.co.uk/insulin/how-insulin-pumps-work.html
There's a pump section in the forum too
It may help you and there are so many video's on youtube that would help you learn about them, I have been on one since December 2015 and overall control has improved but by no means perfect. A pump is only as good as its user and the work you put into keeping your levels good
Hi Chloesnavy,
The main advantages of the pump are:
This can all really help to improve your control, and even have a more flexible lifestyle. Having your basals set up correctly makes it much easier to vary the time at which you eat, or skip meals, for instance.
- Ability to control your basal levels at different hours of the day (e.g. more basal at night, less basal during the day)
- Ability to temporarily change your basal levels (which helps to deal with exercise)
- Inbuilt dosage calculator (you have to tell it carbs and your BG)
- Convenience and discreetness of bolusing
You can ask your clinic to loan you a pump to try out.
Hi - agree with @catapillar & @Gaz-M - still some work with it but I love my pump. Got it last Apr & my HBA1C has come down. It's v flexible - being able to change basal rates hour by hour is fab. Good luck
Thank you. I think I need one now tbh. I'm struggling over here haha. Feel so stupid.
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