- Messages
- 2,161
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Pump
So I'm getting fed up with Novorapid/Novosluggish - it seems entirely unpredictable at times and sometimes it just takes forever to kick in (the libre has often shown it kicking in at about 5-6 hours - sometimes it does seem to work in 2 hours though) - and I don't deal particularly well with unpredictability at all - I never have.
I have an appt with my diabetic consultant at the Royal Berks* (that's the main hospital in Reading) later in the week, so was considering asking for a change to Fiasp - I'm just fed up of having to wait 5-6 hours to see whether my last dose is actually going to get me to the level I want to get to - I don't want to have to wait 6 hours to find I could've done with a correction much earlier - also often the next meal is less than 6 hours away or after the evening meal I'm asleep by the time 6 hours is up anyway.
So does this sound like a sensible idea since Fiasp is supposedly faster?
I have an appt with my diabetic consultant at the Royal Berks* (that's the main hospital in Reading) later in the week, so was considering asking for a change to Fiasp - I'm just fed up of having to wait 5-6 hours to see whether my last dose is actually going to get me to the level I want to get to - I don't want to have to wait 6 hours to find I could've done with a correction much earlier - also often the next meal is less than 6 hours away or after the evening meal I'm asleep by the time 6 hours is up anyway.
So does this sound like a sensible idea since Fiasp is supposedly faster?