Lana F
Member
I saw this in the news this morning, Medical breakthrough could help millions of diabetes patients, and was wondering what everyone thought of it? They're talking about the artificial pancreas, kind of like an insulin pump/CGM combo, that Dr. Bruce Bode says, "...takes the human element, and the human error, out of the equation. " The artificial pancreas is "a sensor and insulin pump [that] work together to continually check a diabetic's blood sugar and automatically set it at a normal range." Funny thing is, I don't see how that's any different from what they've got now: an insulin pump/CGM combo! I don't wear an insulin pump, but from what I hear, diabetics don't normally go by what their insulin pumps "suggest" (or recommend), because of that "human element." I think there's more room for device error than human error when it comes to diabetes! Don't more people die from insulin pump malfunctions than accidental overdoses of insulin (or underdoses)? Personally, I'd be more scared to have a device ("smart" as it may be) do my thinking for me! I'd always be worried about malfunctions and errors on the device's part! I know I can trust my own judgment, but I don't know about a device! Besides, I think they're making it a little too easy for people to NOT have to think or work these days -- just let your smart device do all your thinking for you, or those humanoids in Japan do all the work. I think it's one way to brainwash people; not letting them be responsible for their own health and forcing them to live with a device that does all their thinking! Is it that people are so stupid they can't be trusted, or that they're so lazy, they don't want to lift one finger to save their own lives?! Technology is what's making everyone so sick in the first place -- you don't realize how much air pollution all those factories make manufacturing everything we "can't live without these days!" If it weren't for all the pollution (air, water, noise, etc.), we'd be healthier and we wouldn't need some kind of contraption deciding how much insulin we need, for us. It's weird, because instead of doing something positive about the things that make us sick, in the first place, the world is looking for more ways to make us sick, only under the guise of making us "well" and hassle-free! How convenient! All I know is, I've been taking care of my type 1 diabetes for more than 15 years with 2 daily injections and a few finger sticks. And I'm good! No sweat! Maybe if people took care of their health better, and if the world stopped messing with nature so much, there wouldn't be a need for all this medical technology. Hardly anyone would be sick! The scary part is, all these seemingly convenient solutions to our health problems are creating more health problems. But big pharma prefers it that way, because then they can come up with new drugs to treat all the new diseases that get bred! Instead of throwing our money away on developing yet another form of diabetes treatment, why not try back-peddling for a bit and find out what causes some of these diseases, first. Then find a way to prevent them. An ounce of prevention beats a pound of cure! I don't know, am I crazy for thinking this way? They say the artificial pancreas might hit the market soon, with possible FDA approval by 2016. Who wants to be the first to try it?
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