Yes that's more than fair enough.I'm hoping she will change her mind, but I'm not prepared to keep pushing her. She's been type 1 for just shy of 18 months. She's had a lot to come to terms with in such a short space of time. I'll continue letting her make the decisions. It's her diabetes, not mine
As with most things T1 related, sadly, the ability to manage with treatments and measurement mechanisms is important in using them, and there is a significant proportion of those with T1 that really struggle with that (when talking to various HCPs, it amounts to around 30% of the T1 population), so education is absolutely critical in a)dealing with T1D and b) being able to use any tools that help you deal with it. We sometimes forget how many people truly struggle with the condition.Yes I agree with education in that sense. However, DSNs & consultants are given the space to only offer pumps to T1s that can 'manage' pumps (as well as fitting NICE clinical criteria) - why not entrust them with similar responsibility on CGM-type technologies?
SignedHi, not sure if this is appropriate ( so apologies if not) but I've just signed this petition and thought I'd share http://you.38degrees.org.uk/petitions/freestyle-libre-on-the-nhs
Never, but never take insulin based on what this thing says. Never.
I understand what you mean, but I also feel that it's highly beneficial for all diabetics especially to chart patterns and gain better control and understanding and patterns relating to our T1. I buy my own and at £100 a month it's expensive. I do not need a prescription of testing strips (which for someone who used 8-10 a day is massive saving) nor do I need a prescription for lancets, which would equate to one sensor at least if not two. I now test my sugars up to 20 times a day as it's so simple. My Hba1c has come down by 1.5. I see that a short term spend will equal a long term saving for the NHS. I feel really strongly about this as do my hospital diabetes teamThe NHS are strapped for cash as it is. I think we should be grateful for what we get for free already.
A Libre is not an essential part of diabetes care.
Hi there. I have one and I can't imagine going back to strips. It's convenient, easy, spots trends and rather than just giving you a blood sugar it also shows an arrow indicating whether ur sugars are rising, falling or stable. It's ingenious!!!! Try! Try! Try!I am interested - have many people had bad or unproductive experiences with CGMs? I ask from the point of ingnorance and as someone who would like to try one. It seems relevant to the debate here and the differing views I am hearing.
I've posted this regularly on topics discussing the Libre, and I'm going to do it here again too. Whilst the Libre and CGM are amazing tools, and help people to improve their management, the people who pop up and say "I test 8-10 times a day so it will save the NHS tons of money in strips" are rather missing the point. You are the absolute minority. Most people with Type 1 test less than once a day (if you dig around the forum and my blog I've linked to the studies on multiple occasions, but it amounts to about 50% of all T1s, which is a shocking statistic) and in addition, the cost of CGM/Libre is considerably more than Glucomen LX test strips over a year - roughly twice the cost in fact - (check this post http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/thr...gn-the-petition-now.96988/page-2#post-1093151).I understand what you mean, but I also feel that it's highly beneficial for all diabetics especially to chart patterns and gain better control and understanding and patterns relating to our T1. I buy my own and at £100 a month it's expensive. I do not need a prescription of testing strips (which for someone who used 8-10 a day is massive saving) nor do I need a prescription for lancets, which would equate to one sensor at least if not two. I now test my sugars up to 20 times a day as it's so simple. My Hba1c has come down by 1.5. I see that a short term spend will equal a long term saving for the NHS. I feel really strongly about this as do my hospital diabetes team
We all know Libre is never going to be on the NHS! NEVER!!!Hi, not sure if this is appropriate ( so apologies if not) but I've just signed this petition and thought I'd share http://you.38degrees.org.uk/petitions/freestyle-libre-on-the-nhs
That's not what the noises coming from the top people in Diabetes care in the NHS suggest.We all know Libre is never going to be on the NHS! NEVER!!!
Libre is still cheaper than Dexcom. It is also smaller and less invasive. I use Dexcom G5 because I am allergic to the Libre adhesive and didn't like having to have a separate reader rather than using my iPhone, but nevertheless I prefer the actual size and style of the Libre sensor. I wish Dexcom was smaller and more user-friendly.So if y'all have to pay for the thing out of pocket why don't you get the good one, the Dexcom? Works with a cell phone, no separate thingy to read the results, alarms you at night if you're going down the tubes, supposedly more accurate. I don't get ithow many people use the Libre there. Originally I thought because it was the only one NHS would supply but that's not the case as I understand it. Why drive a beater when you can drive a Mini Cooper (like me)?
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