@MissMJ73 Do you know what the reason for the sudden drop was ? Just so you're ok for this evening, glad you're ok btw, it is a scary experience when levels drop suddenly whether driving or not.
I don’t know. Maybe I injected more insulin then I needed to at lunch because my levels were up and didn’t take into account the side affect. They are all over the place at the mo. One minute high and next min dropping like anything!
Hi,
What insulins are you prescribed? I also notice on your profile that you also take metformin.? This may also affect insulin sensitivity & retard liver dump.
If you are struggling unusually with your BGs.. Possibly contact your diabetic team for a review?
It's good that you have hypo awareness. (Just don't mention the car to em..)
Edited to add, in answer to your question.? Stop the car. I've had a crack at computor simulations whilst low. & been low prior to having to drive. I just loose all confidence till I'm back in the "zone."
It's just not worth the risks on any level...
My (sadly now deceased) T1 mother suggested that if you feel low on a motorway you should pull over on to the hard shoulder, chomp your carb, wait out the hypo, and tell any police that query this that you suspected the accelerator had stuck briefly.... (This advice was a decade or so ago, mind, and I can't now remember whether it was accelerator or brakes, but the point was that a car defect was making you pause for a while.) Luckily I've never had to try this out but my one experience of driving hypo (about twenty years ago) was extremely scary and I was very lucky that I didn't have an accident. I am now paranoid about vehicles and blood testing and haven't had any issues since.
My (sadly now deceased) T1 mother suggested that if you feel low on a motorway you should pull over on to the hard shoulder, chomp your carb, wait out the hypo, and tell any police that query this that you suspected the accelerator had stuck briefly.... (This advice was a decade or so ago, mind, and I can't now remember whether it was accelerator or brakes, but the point was that a car defect was making you pause for a while.) Luckily I've never had to try this out but my one experience of driving hypo (about twenty years ago) was extremely scary and I was very lucky that I didn't have an accident. I am now paranoid about vehicles and blood testing and haven't had any issues since.
Anyway is allowed to stop and/or load on double yellows and resident's parking spaces. A parking enforcement officer must allow a few minutes before issuing a ticket.
If you are with the car the complete time, the parking enforcement officer would have to come back again to prove you were there for more then a few minutes and not loading. They also don't like setting themselfs up to loose on appeal.
It can tale a little longer than a "few minutes" (especially with active insulin on board.) for hypo treatment to register a BG increment signalling legal fitness to drive. In some cases a reading taken 5 to 10 minutes after the initial low can read possibly lower? Due to "lag." It's quit easy to panic thinking the treatment isn enough, then over treat.
I normally give a second test at least half hour?
That include the use of a Libre.. I'm currently fixing a 3.6er, ten later 3.2. Now I'm on the rise..
... & not behind the wheel of a car.
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