I don’t get out of bed to raise the false lows (& do a fingerprick & record the reading as proof that I’m not running too low) she will continue to insist that I run my blood sugar higher.
I've experienced this issue. In short, like the Libre 1 there's good and bad sensors. My main strategy for managing it is adjusting my Alarm settings in response to each Sensor's accuracy. I've been on Libre 2 for about 7 months and whilst the consistently under-reading Sensors are annoying, the majority are not like that. The ones I did get like that tended to be all in one batch for whatever reason, i.e. if I picked up 4 from the Chemist and one under-read my Blood Sugar, it would be almost guaranteed the other three would to.That sounds like a nightmare. Have you tried
1) asking Abbott for suggestions
2) putting the libre sensor in a different position (stomach, under arm?)
Maybe the libre users on this forum could make some suggestions... Start a new thread?
You could also trial a dexcom.... but it's more expensive and not sure if you could persuade the NHS to pay for it.
If that happened to me, it could easily lead to nasty fights with me accusing them of not caring if I lost my eyesight/kidneys/feet. Which wouldn't be true and not helpful at all, so please try to be NOT like me, it wouldn't improve anything.Because my partner knows someone who eats anything saying “I’ll pay for it later” & doesn’t care about having high blood sugars, they seem to think I should do the same.
I got lucky with mine, I just show her my TIR according to DiaBox when I'm there, and she ignores the Libre one. I hope you can get your consultant to believe you.
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