I was wondering how do people deal with DT1 in countries with hot climate (Middle East, India, ...) since you're not supposed to expose the insulin to temperatures higher than 25 degrees celsius. Do they have to keep insulin in the fridge or do they have another strategy?
I understand you're supposed to store your insulin in the fridge whatever country you're in, except for the insulin that you're using in your pen/syringe. When travelling abroad I use my Frio wallet to keep it cool.
I understand you're supposed to store your insulin in the fridge whatever country you're in, except for the insulin that you're using in your pen/syringe. When travelling abroad I use my Frio wallet to keep it cool.
Most homes in hot countries will have air conditioning so the ambient room temperature won't differ much from that in UK homes; hence no need to refrigerate once in use.
When out and about Frio wallets can be helpful to keep insulin cool.
Not living in a hot country I keep my insulin cool in the fridge, whilst the cartridge I'm using doesn't need to be (as per instructions on the insulin packaging), and have been doing so for the last 50 years. Using straight from the fridge can be more painful due to it being cold and room temperature is recommended.
I think the main point is there is no harm in storing the insulin that's in use in the fridge. You have to store it somewhere, so why not in a cool place. If your home is not air conditioned, then the fridge makes most sense.
I think the main point is there is no harm in storing the insulin that's in use in the fridge. You have to store it somewhere, so why not in a cool place. If your home is not air conditioned, then the fridge makes most sense.
I live in Turkey and use a pump. The insulin in my pump does not degrade over three days. Novorapid is quite stable. (Most people in Turkey do NOT have AC, btw). When I was on MDI I found Lantus was unstable, so I wouldn't carry it anywhere without an ice pack, but my Novorapid pens didn't degrade over the week to ten days that they lasted, even if I didn't put them in the fridge between uses.
As an aside, when living/traveling somewhere hot, you need to be very careful about putting your insulin in someone else's fridge. Because it can be too COLD. IME heat makes insulin degrade quite slowly, but freezing or near freezing temperatures ruin it straight away and you need to find a chemist. I think the 'diabetic' fridge needs to be a model of moderation.