aphex2k
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 216
- Location
- Rockingham, Western Australia
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Pump
- Dislikes
- People that talk with their mouths full of food.
This is one of my nightmare scenarios. Thankfully, I have never achieved it yet but every time I take my pump off in the gym changing rooms, I check and double check I have locked it away. I fear I will get complacent one day and never see it again.Well... On an idiot scale of 1 to 10......I'm a big fat 10. I took my pump off after a run. Put it on the roof of the car. Can you see where this is going? Bingo. Lost pump. Drive back over the route 3 times. I'm hoping someone has found it and will hand it in to the cops.... But it happened at 7pm and our lovely city cop shop closes at 4pm. Apparently there's mo criminals after 4pm...
Fortunately I've got some pen tips but I only have novorapid, no lantus. I also have the option of my old accuchek pump assuming all of the bits are there. Argh. Eejut.
Doubt it will be covered by car insurance. Just as unlikely to be covered by home insurance. And I sent back the old one at lunch time today (the one I lost was my new one which was only set up last night.
Feeling like a prat.
Yeah I can pick up some lantus tomorrow. As to how to get a replacement pump. Not sure. I'll ring Medtronic in the morning and call my insurance and health fund. I may be able to blag it. It's a horrible feeling and it was totally my fault, just a few seconds of not thinking. I drove about 3km. Panicked. Pulled over and checked the car. And drove back.This is one of my nightmare scenarios. Thankfully, I have never achieved it yet but every time I take my pump off in the gym changing rooms, I check and double check I have locked it away. I fear I will get complacent one day and never see it again.
My DSN ensured I had both NovoRapid and Lantus pens as a pump backup. They come with me every time I spend a night away from home and were needed when my pump failed earlier in the year.
It feels like a waste of insulin (and taxpayers' money) every time I take the cartridge out of the fridge but I guess my life is worth it.
If you haven't already, I highly recommend getting Lantus cartridges on your prescription and making sure you have some (in date) in your fridge.
Fingers crossed you get a replacement pump as soon as possible.
Hi @aphex2k, I feel for you. It could happen to any of us in a million and one different ways. I know that with a past Animas pump I was trying to clean out the grove where the pump clip fits, using a small screwdriver. In this process I managed to push through the aluminium casing of the pump and that set off the pump failure signal. Animas replaced the pump with a stern warning to me !!Yeah I can pick up some lantus tomorrow. As to how to get a replacement pump. Not sure. I'll ring Medtronic in the morning and call my insurance and health fund. I may be able to blag it. It's a horrible feeling and it was totally my fault, just a few seconds of not thinking. I drove about 3km. Panicked. Pulled over and checked the car. And drove back.
Argh so after a high of 22 yesterday I was (kind of) woken by a 3am hypo at 2.1. Must have been bad as the bed was soaked in sweat. This totally sucks. Will be on the phone to Medtronic first thing Monday morning.Well still not shown up. Car or home insurance wont cover loss, and Medtronic have no loss replacement deal. Health fund wont supply a new one until the warranty is out so that's 3.5 years. I've been to the docs, got a script for Lantus and gone back to injecting. Had a high of 22mmol/L today and felt awful.
On a slight plus, Medtronic have a loan program and will loan me a pump for $179 a month. I can't really afford this but I also can't afford $9000 for a new pump so looks likes it's beans on toast for the foreseeable future, unless a miracle happens and someone hands it in.
Instinctively I keep reaching for my pump to see what my BSL is. D'oh.
It might be. I went back to 32u as I used to. Split 12u at 11pm and the rest at 8am. Levels are good when I go to bed. I don't recall lantus doing this tome before I went to a pump. Hmm....So @aphex2k, is it the long acting insulin causing the persistent hypo trouble?
Not sure... As I remember, lantus for me in one hit (32 ish units around 11pm) seemed to last around 20 hours for me which is why I split the dose. It's been over three years though so I might just try a single dose again and see how that goes. Hopefully I can get the pump quick time.... Pretty tired of broken sleep pattern at the moment.@aphex2k, could some the the morning Lantus be acting in concert with the evening Lantus, as Lantus at least on company insulin profiles last about 24 hours +/-?
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