JoKalsbeek
Expert
- Messages
- 6,723
- Location
- The Netherlands
- Type of diabetes
- I reversed my Type 2
- Treatment type
- Diet only
Hey again. I asked, specifically, whether I had to get different needles. Kindof lost faith in that lot when they kept telling me to up the dose, while I told them Night was going hypo twice a day on the low one, and had been for a week. (Try getting a 1.2 mmol/l cat out of a hypo. It's not easy). When someone starts yelling at me when I know something's off, I'm out. Going for Lantus worked for him, though, so there was that. Night doesn't like pens, they startle him. So those are out. And when we got him and his friend from the spca, we also got them pet health insurance. Good thing too, otherwise we would've been unable to afford the pancreatitis-treatment and various surgeries over the years. (Not to mention insulin, kidneymedication and whatnot). But thanks for the suggestion! Night's actually got better insurance coverage than his humans do.It may have been an "oversight" from the professor..
If your cat is on full units? It maybe a cheaper option (in the long run.) looking into getting an older style ClikStar pen (or the newer developed AllStar pro.) as opposed to classic syringes then just purchasing the needles for the Lantus cartridge?
Certainly less hassle for you than drawing up to a syringe... I've had experience "drawing up" from the age of 8.![]()
