Bridie9408
Well-Known Member
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Thanks for your reply. The doctor wants me to switch but I am not sure what to. I just cut him of as soon as he mentioned 4 injections.Do you mean your doctor wants you to inject your mixed insulin 4 times a day or do they want you to switch to a basal/bolus regime (1 injection of long acting, 3 before meals)?
If on basal/bolus you can eat whenever you like but just inject before eating every time. So, yes, you have to eat after every injection, but that simply means you don't inject when you don't want to eat.
Thanks for your reply. The doctor wants me to switch but I am not sure what to. I just cut him of as soon as he mentioned 4 injections.
Thanks everybody for your replies but I think I would never get the hang of that. I am from Northern Ireland and the clinic I attend is way behind rest of the UK.I'm probably 6 times a day.
6am - inject my long lasting Tresiba and a separate injection of novorapid to cover 1st breakfast
10am - novorapid to cover 2nd breakfast
About 1pm - novorapid to cover lunch
Mid afternoon - novorapid for a snack
7pm - novorapid for dinner
I check bloods before bed at around 10pm and if they are over 10 may make a correction injection depending on what I had for dinner.
Thanks Bill 166Hi Bridie9408,
I was diagnosed T1D 37 years ago, and put on a mixture of insulins. I well remember the hassles of needing to organise my world around needing to eat fixed amounts at certain fixed times, depending on the absorption rates of the insulins.
Moving to a basal-bolus regime with multiple injections a day was life changing. Suddenly I didn't need to eat at fixed times! If I wanted to skip a meal or eat late, no problem, you only need to inject when you want to eat. Eating in a restaurant when they give you something unexpected and you need more or less insulin to handle it? Just change the amount you take for that one meal. Travelling to different time zones? No problem. Catching a nasty bug and unable to eat for a day? No problem. It put me in charge of the condition instead of being a slave to the treatment regime. I couldn't recommend it more.
It's seriously not that bad. I was only diagnosed last year and it just becomes routine. Time to eat? Then test and inject.Thanks everybody for your replies but I think I would never get the hang of that. I am from Northern Ireland and the clinic I attend is way behind rest of the UK.
Definitely agree with that, you do get used to it, I know there was issues when I changed from 2 injections to 4 a day, but then I was 15 at the time and hated the idea of more and well I was a teenager, but yeah I think I got used to it very quickly - worst thing was actually having to take my injections to school with me (hadn't had to with only 2 a day) !It's seriously not that bad. I was only diagnosed last year and it just becomes routine. Time to eat? Then test and inject.
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