UBFester
Member
After a nightmare couple of months with sky high blood sugar, illness and a bunch of other rubbish i've finally got to the bottom of my blood sugar issues.
Turns out the Chemist wasn't storing the insulin in the fridge after delivery and it was sitting out for X number of hours in the main shop where the temperature was a nice 25+ degrees. By the time I got the insulin it was already going off and by the time I got halfway through the batch it was next to useless. I've had unpredictable blood sugar, seen numbers up into the 20s on some occasions and have been unable to get a number reliably below 10 unless engaging in strenuous ( 45 minutes on the X trainer) exercise AND eating a low carb diet.
How did i find out?
I went in this time and miraculously I was about 30 minutes after the delivery and noticed it was still cold, i overheard them say 'we haven't booked that in yet so it's still on the floor and not in the fridge'. My suspicion is that that they were only putting it into the Fridge once it had been booked in and allocated to a prescription which could be taking literally hours and in the temperature the Chemist is kept at, it was enough to ruin it.
It cannot be coiincidence that on this new fresh batch ( that they haven't stored ) my blood sugars have dropped back into range in less than 48 hours and my old carb to insulin calculations are almost perfect again - nothing else has changed. Duly tested with half a thin crust pizza last night, spiked up to 10 and back down to 6 again an hour later purely on insulin alone. It isn't the first time I've had the problem with that Chemist and on previous times they have denied fault - in the 10 years I was with Boots where i used to live, I never had this problem. My blood sugar has been less controlled/ controllable since moving towns and I now realise this is why.
My dispensing Chemist has now been changed to the local Boots superstore ( not so close to the house ) and after a chat with their Pharmacy and discussed their booking in system for refrigerated medicines, I'm much happier with it.
If you've been diabetic 20+ years - trust your meter and your skills - the problem may well not be you!
Turns out the Chemist wasn't storing the insulin in the fridge after delivery and it was sitting out for X number of hours in the main shop where the temperature was a nice 25+ degrees. By the time I got the insulin it was already going off and by the time I got halfway through the batch it was next to useless. I've had unpredictable blood sugar, seen numbers up into the 20s on some occasions and have been unable to get a number reliably below 10 unless engaging in strenuous ( 45 minutes on the X trainer) exercise AND eating a low carb diet.
How did i find out?
I went in this time and miraculously I was about 30 minutes after the delivery and noticed it was still cold, i overheard them say 'we haven't booked that in yet so it's still on the floor and not in the fridge'. My suspicion is that that they were only putting it into the Fridge once it had been booked in and allocated to a prescription which could be taking literally hours and in the temperature the Chemist is kept at, it was enough to ruin it.
It cannot be coiincidence that on this new fresh batch ( that they haven't stored ) my blood sugars have dropped back into range in less than 48 hours and my old carb to insulin calculations are almost perfect again - nothing else has changed. Duly tested with half a thin crust pizza last night, spiked up to 10 and back down to 6 again an hour later purely on insulin alone. It isn't the first time I've had the problem with that Chemist and on previous times they have denied fault - in the 10 years I was with Boots where i used to live, I never had this problem. My blood sugar has been less controlled/ controllable since moving towns and I now realise this is why.
My dispensing Chemist has now been changed to the local Boots superstore ( not so close to the house ) and after a chat with their Pharmacy and discussed their booking in system for refrigerated medicines, I'm much happier with it.
If you've been diabetic 20+ years - trust your meter and your skills - the problem may well not be you!