I felt I had to tell you my experience with the Libre, which I applied for in January and received in March. I was diagnosed T2 in 2002, and started on 2 a day insulin in 2010. Throughout the whole time since 2002 I have not been able to control my BG properly, having readings in the low 20s quite frequently. When they started doing HbA1c my levels were consistently around 95 to 100, at my last clinic visit in February it was 98 and the consultant wanted to increase the number of injections to 4 a day. I told him I was getting the Libre so he agreed to wait until my visit in July.
As soon as I started using the Libre I felt I was gaining better control, and I was swiping every hour or so to tell me which foods were affecting me most. Having the constant stream of information was great, and the fact that it showed what was happening during the night was really good too. The biggest benefit for me by far was that I swipe before I get in the car, and if it shows around 4 but going down I have a glass of juice and a biscuit to make sure my levels are high enough. I know the Libre is not an acceptable device for DVLA, but for me it is much more important that it tells me if levels are going down which a finger prick just does not do. I check the Libre against the Verio IQ and the Libre is always a little bit lower than the Verio, so I am confident that I am driving safely.
In July I went back to the clinic, to be told that my HbA1c had fallen to 53, so they have started reducing my insulin - result!!! So for me the cost is justified because not only do I not have to prick my fingers so much, but my health has dramatically improved and I have regained control of my life.
When raised on the FB group, it seems that nearly everyone who adopted in October/November last year got an invite but those who were 2015 take-up are more distributed in their receipt of emails.I wonder. Is everyone being invited to join the PIP? I first ordered in May, and accepted the invitation this morning, so I'm hardly a true early adopter. I wonder if the proportion of issues and returns influences the selection criteria.
Whichever, it'll be interesting to see what transpires.
When raised on the FB group, it seems that nearly everyone who adopted in October/November last year got an invite but those who were 2015 take-up are more distributed in their receipt of emails.
**** I just found out that a ov-chipkaart (electronic card for public transport in NL) can disable a sensor. Have the sensor on my leg and put the card in my pocket on the same side...
Probably best to keep any nfc devices, except for your reader, away from the sensor.
Has it been cleared for use not on the arm now? or are you just a rebel @Hill28 ? ;-)
Now here's something new. This is an app for Android that reads the Libre and plots it. Apparently it doesn't have the same predictive algo that is present in the reader.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=it.ct.glicemia
What's more interesting is that it continues to read the sensor beyond the 14 day cut off imposed by the Libre reader... I wonder for how long and what the life can be extended to?
I'll look forward to the feedback. Being able to stretch the sensors would be excellent. Fo me, just the raw data would be absolutely fine, as I'm just trend monitoring, in reality.I have both @AndBreathe. I will give it a whirl and see what it comes out like...
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