That looks like a smug "I knew that" emoji.
The butcher across the road from me has a poster in the window as part of a campaign for public access defibrillators.
Good idea in principle, but there's also about a dozen bars in the area, so it's only a matter of time before a bunch of lads coming home from a night on the town reckon it'll be a larf to start electrocuting each other...
Hi @helensaramay, Enjoy your time in the limelight.I had a light bulb moment as I trudged up the hill on the way back from Morrisons this lunchtime.
About one a month, I wake up with high BG despite going to bed with a good BG.
Sometime ago, I realised this was related to pasta and always happened when I had eaten faux carbonara with smoked mackrel - a tasty dish high in carbs and fat and very quick and easy to make after a tough day of work.
I have been experimenting with combi bolusing but been amazed by the amount of insulin I appear to need.
I am an occasional Libre user. Using it to identify trends rather than to calculate insulin doses from.
I have one on at the moment and ate smoked mackrel carbonara for my evening meal last night.
Despite the combi bolus, and going to bed on 5.6, my BG rose throughout the night.
My expectation had been for it to reach a high plateau (is that a sierra?) and stay there until I took a correction bolus.
But it kept on climbing.
I had been interpreting this as the carbs being digested over 12 hours which seemed silly.
That's when I had the light bulb moment.
I am very aware of insulin resistance when my BG gets high and, therefore, increase my bolus when going high.
But until my post-Morrison trudge, I had not thought about how it also affects basal.
So, once I reach a certain level and not awake to correct it, my basal is not enough to keep it stable.
Hence the continuous rise - after a certain time period, it has nothing to do with the carbs but more to do with the insulin resistance,
I still need to work out the insulin combi bolus dose but I don't have to spread it over such a long period.
I have more information to set that bolus dose next time ... next month
I am sure you are all clever enough to realise that insulin resistance affects basal as well as bolus.
But I would appreciate it if you didn't tell me - just let me bask in my new found knowledge.
I had a light bulb moment as I trudged up the hill on the way back from Morrisons this lunchtime.
About one a month, I wake up with high BG despite going to bed with a good BG.
Sometime ago, I realised this was related to pasta and always happened when I had eaten faux carbonara with smoked mackrel - a tasty dish high in carbs and fat and very quick and easy to make after a tough day of work.
I have been experimenting with combi bolusing but been amazed by the amount of insulin I appear to need.
I am an occasional Libre user. Using it to identify trends rather than to calculate insulin doses from.
I have one on at the moment and ate smoked mackrel carbonara for my evening meal last night.
Despite the combi bolus, and going to bed on 5.6, my BG rose throughout the night.
My expectation had been for it to reach a high plateau (is that a sierra?) and stay there until I took a correction bolus.
But it kept on climbing.
I had been interpreting this as the carbs being digested over 12 hours which seemed silly.
That's when I had the light bulb moment.
I am very aware of insulin resistance when my BG gets high and, therefore, increase my bolus when going high.
But until my post-Morrison trudge, I had not thought about how it also affects basal.
So, once I reach a certain level and not awake to correct it, my basal is not enough to keep it stable.
Hence the continuous rise - after a certain time period, it has nothing to do with the carbs but more to do with the insulin resistance,
I still need to work out the insulin combi bolus dose but I don't have to spread it over such a long period.
I have more information to set that bolus dose next time ... next month
I am sure you are all clever enough to realise that insulin resistance affects basal as well as bolus.
But I would appreciate it if you didn't tell me - just let me bask in my new found knowledge.
I recall a company (not sure where, or which country) was trialling a system where a defib machine would be flown out by drone to a shopping centre etc needing one urgently. Of course there were logistical problems to solve. But what havoc could a drone like that cause and what might a group of people do to it?As I understand it, Scott, should a member of the public want to grab a defib, they have to call 999 for the code to open the magic box, then they are guided if it is felt defibrillation is the appropriate course of action. If the defib were coming into play an ambulance would be dispatched asap.
Of course that doesn't assure it's possible to 100% prevent meddlesome japes, but there are processing in place.
Systems may differ in Scotland.
I am very aware of insulin resistance when my BG gets high and, therefore, increase my bolus when going high.
I recall a company (not sure where, or which country) was trialling a system where a defib machine would be flown out by drone to a shopping centre etc needing one urgently. Of course there were logistical problems to solve. But what havoc could a drone like that cause and what might a group of people do to it?
There were three of us applying for one training position, so I guess I have a 33% chance... I’m not optimistic, I don’t think I came across as well as I usually do - I thought of all the right things to say on the way home...How did your interview go this afternoon, @Mel dCP ?
Fingers cossed mel xThere were three of us applying for one training position, so I guess I have a 33% chance... I’m not optimistic, I don’t think I came across as well as I usually do - I thought of all the right things to say on the way home...![]()
There were three of us applying for one training position, so I guess I have a 33% chance... I’m not optimistic, I don’t think I came across as well as I usually do - I thought of all the right things to say on the way home...![]()
Good news cumbsHbA1c result down a smidge from 67 to 64 so I’m pleased with that
Cholesterol down a smidge too
Little steps
Good news cumbs![]()