MrsDiabetic
Member
- Messages
- 16
Hi,
Does being insulin dependent mean I need to have a glucagon emergency kit at home?
Or do I need to experience severe hypo before my gp prescribe it?
I only have been diagnosed a month ago hence asking.
As @Rokaab said, you need to make sure that someone else in your house knows how to use it. The idea is they administer it if you are too far gone to take sugar eg unconscious or unable to swallow. At that point, you won't have the ability to use it yourself.Given me peace of mind having it in the house. Hoping to never be to use it though
In that case I would call emergency services, plus my neighbours before using the Glucagon.Also potentially life saving if you live alone, inject for meal, have meal and then are violently sick and can't keep anything down and you're going into hypo territory. Happened to me once and was scary.
Did this just yesterday. Went into one of those will not go away hypos, drank 1.5l lucozade, threw up massively. I had no idea if I'd absorbed enough glucose. Fortunately we are having a house extension built, so I wobbled out to the builders, sat down, and said if I keel over, please call an ambulance. The really annoying bit is I still feel horrible today.Also potentially life saving if you live alone, inject for meal, have meal and then are violently sick and can't keep anything down and you're going into hypo territory. Happened to me once and was scary.
That is really useful to know, thanks. I had a very rare incident recently when my husband had to use a 4 year out of date one and getting a new up to date one from the GP took 4 visits and a week's wait. The chemist's won’t replace out of date glucopen's either or issue over the counter as an emergency. It would be so useful to be able to access somewhere with the latest diabetic kit, I'm not often at the clinic and as we all know, the GP's don’t have the latest type 1 info.Just for info , my nurse told me the other day as of a few months ago there's a new glucagon emergency pen out.
At the moment I have the orange one. It involves the person administering it having to mix the liquid and the powder before giving the injection. This might cause delay and confusion in an emergency situation. Anyway there's a new pre filled injection that is just given to.the person. No mixing etc needed.
I've made a request to get this new type. The gp has said yes, just waiting for pharmacy to her hold of it now
I'm hoping my husband will be less nervous about this one. Less potential for mistakes.
Do remember though first aiders do not generally give injections - many may feel uncomfortable if you ask them to do so, and as the the trainer on the course told you it may actually not be legal for them to do soI decided that once we're back in the office regularly I can show a couple of the other first aiders how to use it just in case
Do remember though first aiders do not generally give injections - many may feel uncomfortable if you ask them to do so, and as the the trainer on the course told you it may actually not be legal for them to do so
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