Hi Parm, I’m on my third. Self funding - my nhs gps won’t even supply strips to T2s and their slavishly nhs-corporate-line-loyal diabetes nurse is obsessed with hb1ac, often only tested once a year. Hb1ac is of course an average and won’t give you a full picture. Even strips don’t give a full picture. Libre taught me milk in my tea instantly spiked me, so now I’m on lemon tea. I would never have known it without. Christmas with it has proved definitively that one spud, just one, gives me a spike and that kind of echoes for days afterwards - I discovered this at a Christmas lunch early in December. It taught me I get extremely low bg in the middle of the night. It taught that plain old walking without going very fast is a big influence on bg. Go for a walk after lunch, just like your grandparents used to. There is positive numerical feedback from it too. As my blood sugar improves the shape of spikes changes - I’m more like a non diabetic with sharp rises and then quick sharp falls. The only real alarms I’ve had (it sets off alarms on your phone) is on cycling with no food. My bg tore up to 15 and stayed there - all from activity in my liver of course. As soon as I stopped cycling it fell again. I’ll be interested to see does my bg respond to heavy exercise so violently if (when?) I manage to get my liver back into normal shape. I’m going to buy a couple more and wring every bit of info I can out of it, then stop. At nearly £100 a month you’d need to be pretty well off to keep buying them. But as an information gathering device I would recommend them