I thought Frio pouches only keep it "cool" (as in it won't spoil in hot weather) rather than at fridge temperature though?You could get yourself a Frio bag which will keep your insulin cool for the journey. Have heard only good comments about the bags
Hi, I know insulin leaflets say it will keep a month out of the fridge but does anyone have any actual experience with how long it can work when not cooled?
I'm asking because I'm moving country soon and there is a possibility I might not be able to keep it cooled on the journey over. I don't know how long it'll take to get health care set up so I can access new insulin so I wanted to know whether it'll be off after a month exactly, or can it last a bit longer if needed? Would it deteriorate slowly?
I didn't know about the permitted exposure times, thank you that's very helpful! I will order a Frio pouch in that caseAs I understand the situation, the performance of insulin(s) degrade slowly but the rate of degradation is proportional to temperature. But I have also seen forum members write that their insulin has started to degrade after about 20 days so they've had to inject a higher dose to compensate.
Not sure if this tells you anything new?
https://www.iddt.org/about/living-with-diabetes/storing-insulin
Thank you. I did look at options like that first but I don't think I can afford it which is why I'm looking at alternativesIf you really do want to keep it between 2-8C there are a limited number of products which can do this for a maximum of 18 hours. They aren't cheap though - one such example: https://www.mollymojo.co.uk/coolmeds-isothermic-bag-with-thermometer.html
I can't say how well the bigger ones like that work but I was able to go about 8 hours fridge to fridge with my mini bag last time I travelled to Europe.
Thank you, that's a great tip I'll ask them when I go pick up my prescription!If you put the frio insert in the fridge to cool it before packing your insulin and then insulate the frio itself, maybe with a non-eco polystyrene box, and put the whole lot into an insulated lunch box it may keep it at a lower temperature for longer. You could ask at your pharmacy if they still Receive any medicines in packaging that keeps them insulated, and if they do then ask if they could let you have some.
I always ask the airline to put it in the aeroplane fridge for me - nobody has said no yet.Hi, I know insulin leaflets say it will keep a month out of the fridge but does anyone have any actual experience with how long it can work when not cooled?
I'm asking because I'm moving country soon and there is a possibility I might not be able to keep it cooled on the journey over. I don't know how long it'll take to get health care set up so I can access new insulin so I wanted to know whether it'll be off after a month exactly, or can it last a bit longer if needed? Would it deteriorate slowly?
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