My 91 year old father is returning home after 7 weeks in hospital (one week because of a UTI and six weeks rehabilitation). It's highlighted several problems including my father's reluctance to see a GP when he's ill and his loss of feeling in the whole of his left leg, possibly something to do with his refusal to have a stent put into a major blood vessel when they did the other leg to help with blood flow to his amputated toe.
What surprised me the most was that after years of thinking he was using an insulin pen, there seems to be different types. My father takes about 45 minutes to inject his insulin and I have never known why. I have a friend who is type I and he doesn't take more than a few minutes. While in hospital he has been telling me that when they inject insulin it's all done in seconds and I can't really understand how what the hospital uses is different to what he has at home.
I've googled insulin pens and watched the video, which seem to be the same as my friend, so I'm wondering what device my father has that takes him so long. I know it's not an old fashioned syringe.
I'm hoping that somebody might be able to let me know if there are different types of pen and if some are better than others.
Also, because his sight has deteriorated he will now have a nurse coming round to the house to make sure he is getting the right amount of insulin as he can't see the numbers on the pen. Does anybody know if there is something to help blind/poor sighted people with using the pen and dialing the correct number. It's very nice that a nurse will visit 3 times a day, just for his injections, but . . . .
Also it is certainly unusual but is it causing him any distress or problems?
Does he have enough subcutaeneous fat where he is injecting? Never had that problem but I imaginie a gent of 91 will not have plump legs? The abdomen is the best site.
It could be a general reluctance to do it also?
Here is a link to the RNIB, also phone or email them with your father's medical history, how he is really coping on his own etc to get some useful advice and support. Has he been tested for dementia, not nice I know, but my dear dad had that. Also his GP and Adult Social Services are there too.
All the best.
I have heard of people injecting through shirts and other garments but it does not sound wise
Hopefully there are other aides, devices that might make things easier
I feel for you. The elderly are set in their ways. As I am sure you know unless something needs definite attention sometimes it is easier to go with the flow, even when it goes against the grain, one's learning, understanding and commonsense.Thanks for considering what you'd do with your eyes shut. I have a friend who injects, not through the shirt, just undoes a button to expose some skin. My father has Macular Degeneration and his sight is questionable. He is not registered blind and has refused to see an optician for many years. We think they will have given him a proper eye test while in hospital. He gives us different stories of his sight, one minute he can't read what's on his PC, despite recently typing up his memoirs, now available as a book of 150 pages and even more recently writing a history of Waterloo Station. Then he recognises my wife from 30 ft away (he didn't know she was visiting and she came into the ward several seconds after me).
Frustratingly my suggestion to get a Freestyle Libre was stonewalled, pretty much like anything I have ever suggested. This is particularly tiring and wearing and one eventually gives up trying to help. Seems he sooner make holes in his fingers. I have a feeling that he could probably get it on prescription, it would certainly make life easier for his 4 nurses.
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