@Japes I have trouble keeping the sensors on, and my wonderful nurse found Hydrofilm dressings for me, which I now get on prescription. They're completely clear film dressings, 6cm x 7cm, which cover the sensor nicely. Even then, they start to peel off before two weeks are up, so I often find myself trimming detaching edges and sticking a second one over the top. They have though made an enormous difference. I'm always fascinated by posts from people who find it agonising to gt the sensors off when they expire; mine come off as easily as a sticking plaster, no probs!I do need to use some kind of patch to keep a Libre sensor on and have just ordered some to try. But, I am enjoying it and it seems to be in line with my Caresens meter.
I only look at the forums from my laptop and I'm not finding it at all easy on my eyes - I'm currently using the dark background with white writing as the easiest.
The Omnipod sounds awful! I'm not sure why things don't stick to me very well but, having met a couple of people with a similar problem, I think it's due to very dry skin. I know that sounds counter-intuitive, but dry skin seems to shed more readily, hence things falling off. I may be on completely the wrong track there but I don't have any other explanation, so I'll just keep using the Hydrofilm. think I'd rather need that than end up with scabs from removing stuff - poor you!@hh1 So far the LIbre hasn't caused any major issues. By far my Omnipod is the worse. It has to be tugged off every 3 days and I use nothing extra on it and it is really stuck to me. I have had some scabs where I've pulled it off...........although in fairness I have been pulling things off for years now and I just rip them off and am not careful about it. ! That's why I was surprised when I first wore the Dexcom and it tried to fall off within the first day. I had no aids to help keep it on and am allergic to most tapes. So I wrapped an ace bandage around my arm to keep it on until some Skin Tac arrived for the second one I used.
@Nicola M what's made you change to Lyumjev? What were you using before? I'd be very interested to know how you get on with it, hope it works well for you.
I must say this is the first time I'm actually happy I need pretty large doses of insulin, never looked at it this way before!@hh1 How long does a vial of Fiasp last for you? I have one on the go about 3 weeks and long ago realised it didn’t react the same as it emptied. I also now open a new vial. Same with Tresiba, which I have on the go 6 weeks+. It is hard ditching when there is still stuff in. Goes against all my thrift values. But I realised the not working aspect is more important.
Hi Nicola M, tell us if the Lyumjev works for you, please.I spike terribly at lunch time (going from a nice 6.0-8.0 to 14+) we know my carb counting is correct and I eat the same thing every day, my nurse and doctor tried lowering my carb ratio (1:8) and I inject 15-20 mins before eating but still spike. I’m fine any other time of the day it’s just at lunch so my doctor and nurse agreed the next step was to try a faster acting insulin! I was previously on novorapid and have been all my life. I’ve been told it can sting but hoping that isn’t too bad
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