Dear All,
Due to my job I travel typically 2-6 times per week with an airplane. Have done so on and off for the last 20+ years.
50% of those flights are across all Europe.
40% of the flights are to/from/national flights in USA.
10% long-haul to/from Asia.
Through all those years and flights, I have only 1(one!) single time been pulled out to show my hand luggage due to the insulin pens that I had in my hand/laptop-bag. And yep. I am not shy and always playing it safe, so I often have 4-10 of those laying in the handbag pocket, all depending on the total length of my combined journey over next 1-3 weeks. And the time I was pulled out because of the pens, was because I had made one big compressed bundle of 12 pens kept closely together with elastics, so the total liquid volume/density triggered the scanner. Having them spread causally in a side pocket etc will not trigger anything. And I have so far never been pulled out of the line at security because of the extra (1-2) sensors I bring with me. It actually hardly shows up on their screen, as the electronics and battery within it is too small to make a difference.
Regarding the sensor on my arm and the body scan. The sensor does not trigger the detector alarm when you walk through the special body scanner! Some of you may be pulled out for extra manual scan, as the security gate beeped when walking through. That also happens if you have no metal, no sensor, no nothing, as random spot checks are employed in all airports. So its not because of your sensor on your arm.
I work btw for a medical device company, where we produce medical devices Class III for permanent implants. E.g. cardio defibrillators and neuro brain stimulators. When such devices pose 'a challenge' for security checks at airports (and these type of devices do) then the company producing them issue an official implant ID for the patient which the physician/care provider institution also co-signs. But as said, no need at all for us diabetics just traveling with Libre and our pens.
Regarding checking in your bag with extra sensors: No problem at all !
Doing it on all my long-haul flights, when not just traveling with a handbag. (I like to place backups across all my luggage ;o)
Abbott may say 'always bring it with you in handbag', as of course the risk of loosing it is less. (and they play it safe as a supplier) Depending on the type of airplane, the checked luggage is at times exposed to low temperatures and low air pressure versus the cabin. But not so extreme that it destroys the sensor itself. And it is not a question about security or regulations either.
So fellow diabetics, no reason to worry because of your insulin/bg gear that you bring with you. “Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover!” – Mark Twain