Libby81
Active Member
- Messages
- 31
- Location
- Bridgend, South Wales
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Other
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- Animals apart from dogs.
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Parking
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Morning everyone, I hope you are all well or doing ok?
I am currently awaiting a Freestyle Libre system.
Please can you advise, if you use this system how do you dispose of the :-
The sensor insert
The sensor
I'm personally thinking the sensor will need to be disposed of into a sharp safe box?
Is there any official guidelines for for disposing of the insert?
Thanks in advance.
I think there was a thread about this a while ago.
I agreed to try and dismantle an old sensor applicator to see if there was anything 'dangerous' inside. I couldn't get into it, hooligan that I was !!!! When taking off the first expired sensor, I saw the small filament that had been residing in my arm. It was very flimsy and quite 'bendy', so I decided it was extremely unlikely anyone would get stabbed by it and so I dispose of both sensors and applicators in the household rubbish. Used needles, of course should always go in a Sharps Bin.
I think Abbott are being ultra cautious and this is only my personal take on the situation.
It's entirely up to you to decide what you want to do.
Mine go into bagged rubbish into my usual rubbish - recyclables in the grey bin, and non recyclables in the black bin.
In my view there is nothing riskier then very common bathroom waste - by which I mean disposable razors or the like. The sensor's filament appears to be a teflon coated nylon "bristle" If you stood on it, I can't think of anyone whose skin would be punctured - not even a child.
Obviously those are my personal views.
I drop the sensor back into its wee screw pot and bin it. The 'needle' is very soft and bendy, and the screw pot is secure.
Always keep the sensor packaging until you have finished with the sensor. That way you have all the paperwork, ID code numbers etc. if you need to contact Abbott about it - failing sensors get replaced free.
You definitely need a blood glucose monitor as well, otherwise you'll have no idea how good/bad the sensor is. Most of mine have been good, registering about 0.5mmol/l different to the bg reading. An odd one or two have given results showing I was either hypo or hyper when I wasn't !!
As @Brunneria has said, keep all the packaging until the sensor has expired in case you have to send one back.
You definitely need a blood glucose monitor as well, otherwise you'll have no idea how good/bad the sensor is. Most of mine have been good, registering about 0.5mmol/l different to the bg reading. An odd one or two have given results showing I was either hypo or hyper when I wasn't !!
As @Brunneria has said, keep all the packaging until the sensor has expired in case you have to send one back.
Does that tend to be the norm, anyone with a libre has a tradional BG monitor as well?
Up until now I never realised there was so much out there diabetes related. I guess thats because up untill now I've never needed to be aware.
Just checked the libre page, got a tracking number now. I'm so excited it's quite sad, in my personal opinion. Expected arrival date is the 29th March, hope it either comes before that date. Or early on that date, as I have plans.
I don't know of anyone who has no other method of tracking their bloods.
The Libre reader has an inbuilt traditional meter, so you can test from the handset quite happily, although the strips aren't the cheapest on the market. It does make sense to have some strips at least for the Libre reader as sometimes the support analyst will ask for readings taken either on the Libre or another Abbott meter, if things appear to be going awry with the sensor.
If you are to be prescribed test strips by your GP (the Libre isn't available on prescription at all at the moment), it could be useful to ask for strips that will work with your Libre, although most T2s don't generally manage that bit!
Are you intending full-time utilisation of the Libre, or a burst to begin with then intermittent use?
I intend to fully utilise the libre, as I like the freedom it gives you unlike the traditional kits.
Once, I've got the kit I'm going to buy strips that go with the libre.
The tradition kit that I'm hoping to have hopefully will have less expensive strips, and ones that I could potentially get on prescription from my GP. Intend on buying everything to begin, for my own piece of mind.
To be honest, I thought I'd get the starter pack. Try it for the month and go from there.
I'm probably getting ahead of myself a bit, at this point I really don't know if it will work for me or not.
Hence by having the traditional kit as well I'll be able to make an informed descision.
I love gadgets, that's what initially appealed. Plus the amount of information it gives you.
Normally, as a rule my life is extremely busy. Currently off work sick, so life is slower.
I wonder if I'm just adding pressure to myself when there's no need. Making big descision like this without the full bigger picture if you get my drift. Probably, part of my reaction to the diagnosis.
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