It's an awful lot of money if you don't have it in the first place.£150 isn't that much to get a months worth of 24/7 Libre data - which may also help provide evidence for a pump
It's an awful lot of money if you don't have it in the first place.
As @slip said, £150 isn't bad providing it counts towards better control and the answer to the issue in hand.It's an awful lot of money if you don't have it in the first place.
Have you actually done a basal test? IE., skipping meals and testing every couple of hours, this will give you the answer as to whether it's your basal or bolus causing the problems.My gut feeling is still that the quick-acting Humalog just isn't that quick acting in my body but one step at a time.
I wish I had the money. Two kids, mortgage...there's just nothing left in the monthly budget to sacrifice.
after 50yrs being typ 1 and injection site problems,frozen shoulders, laser both eyes, highs and lows, severely depressed referred for a pump, was refused . as don't meet the criteria. what that means who knows... So not much chanceHi Dan have you considered taking your evening levemir later in the evening i.e. just before bed time?
You do not have to self fund a pump the NHS pays for it. Ask for a pump and if they say no ask for the reasons.
Keep a good food diary plus insulin doses, exercise, illness hypos and present it to your team and ask how to sort it out on MDI. Then ask for a pump.
Than ask why you were refused, not meeting the criteria is not a good enough reason. Write to the consultant concerned s/he has to write back, then contact INPUT for help in securing a pump.after 50yrs being typ 1 and injection site problems,frozen shoulders, laser both eyes, highs and lows, severely depressed referred for a pump, was refused . as don't meet the criteria. what that means who knows... So not much chance
Not easy when you have commitments.
Without stating the obvious but do you rotate your injection sites regularly, do you find the absorption rate varies from site to site and some are much faster than others?
The second question is, are your I:C ratios correct? And also, how many carbs do you eat?So back to the question, why, after eating a meal, is it taking four or so hours for my levels to start to drop?
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