On my Samsung S8 phone, setting 'Do Not Disturb' disables the Libre Alarms and Vibration by default. I think you can override that by playing with the settings.Re the alarms.
This is strange and does not appear consistent, so there may be more than one issue.
If you are seeing some alarms on librelinkup , then the only way librelinkup can know about the alarm is if the information came from the sensor via the librelink app on your son's phone, which means, as least at those times, that both app and the bluetooth connection were working correctly. So then the question is why does your son not hear the alarm?
You mention that the phone was 'on silent' . I have seen people do this in two different ways, either by enabling the DND feature or by switching the volume down to zero. I would assume that with the former, I would hear an low alarm, but not with the later. Is it possible that your son is using the latter method. and perhaps the phone is kept somewhere where the vibration is not felt.
(The default action for the low alarm is to both sound an alarm and vibrate and also to override the "Do not the Disturb" feature and you can check these settings under Alarms, Low Glucose Alarm, Alarm Tone and Advanced).
But, if you are not getting all the alarms on librelinkup, that would suggest that at those times either the app or bluetooth is not working properly. If it is a case of unreliable bluetooth , then I'm afraid I don't have any suggestions (sorry), but the other possibility is that the app is not actually running. Unfortunately this can also be tricky to resolve (if it can be resolved at all) and can depend on the actual phone and manufacturer. I use an Android phone, but I am not blind to issues with them and one of the biggest problems is that every phone manufacturer has the ability to do things in different ways. One of these ways is relating to how they handle background apps. In particular some are aggressive in disabling background apps in order to save battery life and obviously the librelink app needs to be running all the time.
On my phone, I can control the apps that run in the background by going to Settings/Apps & notifications/Advanced/Special app access/Battery optimisation. This brings up a list of apps and I can check that LibreLink is "not optimized".
As far as I know this is the standard Google method and the LibreLink app is automatically installed this way, but unfortunately some manufacturers ignore this and have their own method. I would hope they would still have some way to control these settings, but they would probably be different per manufacturer.
Not sure if this is any help or not.
This is very interesting, thank you.Re the alarms.
This is strange and does not appear consistent, so there may be more than one issue.
If you are seeing some alarms on librelinkup , then the only way librelinkup can know about the alarm is if the information came from the sensor via the librelink app on your son's phone, which means, as least at those times, that both app and the bluetooth connection were working correctly. So then the question is why does your son not hear the alarm?
You mention that the phone was 'on silent' . I have seen people do this in two different ways, either by enabling the DND feature or by switching the volume down to zero. I would assume that with the former, I would hear an low alarm, but not with the later. Is it possible that your son is using the latter method. and perhaps the phone is kept somewhere where the vibration is not felt.
(The default action for the low alarm is to both sound an alarm and vibrate and also to override the "Do not the Disturb" feature and you can check these settings under Alarms, Low Glucose Alarm, Alarm Tone and Advanced).
But, if you are not getting all the alarms on librelinkup, that would suggest that at those times either the app or bluetooth is not working properly. If it is a case of unreliable bluetooth , then I'm afraid I don't have any suggestions (sorry), but the other possibility is that the app is not actually running. Unfortunately this can also be tricky to resolve (if it can be resolved at all) and can depend on the actual phone and manufacturer. I use an Android phone, but I am not blind to issues with them and one of the biggest problems is that every phone manufacturer has the ability to do things in different ways. One of these ways is relating to how they handle background apps. In particular some are aggressive in disabling background apps in order to save battery life and obviously the librelink app needs to be running all the time.
On my phone, I can control the apps that run in the background by going to Settings/Apps & notifications/Advanced/Special app access/Battery optimisation. This brings up a list of apps and I can check that LibreLink is "not optimized".
As far as I know this is the standard Google method and the LibreLink app is automatically installed this way, but unfortunately some manufacturers ignore this and have their own method. I would hope they would still have some way to control these settings, but they would probably be different per manufacturer.
Not sure if this is any help or not.
Two things,I'm in France, my diabetic doctor told me to bypass Freestyle libra 2 due to the alarm system that never seems to stop day or night, and secondly due to Abbott's shortage of Freestyle Libre 2 stock our authorities have authorised a deactivated mobile phone, NUU, as a legal replacement fully paid for as a replacement, which will also work on Freestyle Libre 3 monitors, which are much smaller than 1&2 , but I'm sticking to Freestyle Libre 1I am sorry, this is a long one.
age 17, type 1, diagnosed November 2020. using novarapid and levimir. last HbA1c 41 (Oct 2021, no appointment since althought I do keep calling)
Just started using freestyle libre 2. Need to change sensor.
We have asked advice from the diabeties team (no response) and contacted Abbot customer care (they didnt understand what we were asking).
We completed the online training with a lady from Abott in Jan 2021 but decided not to use the libre at that point.
March 2022 we decided the time was right and completed online video training.
We are very confused with several points that we think we were told during the origional training but cant quite remember what was said. I did make notes but they wernt very detailed. These points were not repeated or clarified fully in the online training and we cant get an answer from our diabeties team or Abbott -
1) During the origional training we were told that a new sensor will be inaccurate for the first 24 hours so insert the new sensor on day 13, then use the origional sensor until the new one has 'settled'. once settled in 24 hours, scan the new sensor and remove the old sensor - is this correct?? If this is correct, do we scan on day 13 or day 14?
2) When inserting a new sensor, we were told it will not send readings for the first hour, so do we scan as soon as it is inserted then continue to use the old one after the hour? when do we scan the new sensor? when do we remove the old sensor?
3) During the origional training we were told to set the minimam glucose alarm at 4.4mmols. This is really distressing my son and waking him several times during the night to treat a hypo that isnt a hypo. When can we change it to 3.9mmols? Also, some nights and maybe twice during the day his reading has gone below 4.4, even as low as 3.2 and yet the sensor did not send a low glucose alarm?! is this normal?
4) With the 2 sensors we have tried already, the arrows on the readings do not move when using the reader or a phone, it is always steady to the side apart from a few times when it has changed higher or lower. However, looking at the graph, his readings have sometimes dropped rapidly or raised rapidly more than 1.5mmols in 15 mins and the arrow did not reflect this, it stayed steady to the side. this happened with two seperate sensors.
5) During the origional training we were told to continue fingerpricks alongside readings until the diabeties team told us to stop the fingerpricks. They havent contacted us to stop but surely we have to as that is the whole purpose of having the libre in the first place?
6) My son uses the My Life app with his blood glucose meter/fingerpricks which tells him how much to inject at mealtimes. Does he have to manually enter the readings into My Life at meal times? Will this be accurate? Or does he still fingerprick before meals?
7) We paired the sensor to the reader the first time. The second sensor we paired to my son's phone. He did not receive high/low glucose alarms. We have since realised his phone is not in the list of compatible devices so does this mean we can only use the reader all the time instead?
Thank you if you have read that far.
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