Hi,Hi
can i ask if anyone knows how the patch is attached to your arm - do you just stick it on like a plaster or is there as medical procedure to it? Thanks
Wow! I've done that a couple of times in a couple of years. If I did it most months I'd look into straps and things to fix them (of which there's a bunch).1 thing i do find with them however is that I at least once or twice a month still mange to rip it off my arm be accident. (the biggest cause is door frames!)
I honestly used to do it lots, it was the nature of the work i was doing, moving from room to room avoiding colleagues, while at home the same but with the wife, my daughter and dog. I catch my self of door handle lots too.Wow! I've done that a couple of times in a couple of years. If I did it most months I'd look into straps and things to fix them (of which there's a bunch).
Ah, OK, that makes more sense.I honestly used to do it lots, it was the nature of the work i was doing, moving from room to room avoiding colleagues, while at home the same but with the wife, my daughter and dog. I catch my self of door handle lots too.
I use these, they are quite good I much prefer them over the conventional finger pricking options.
1 thing i do find with them however is that I at least once or twice a month still mange to rip it off my arm be accident. (the biggest cause is door frames!)
Thank you so very much, i am going to ask my nurse if i can switch to this as i really struggle with the finger pricking - have needle phobia xHi,
The sensor comes in a yellow box from the pharmacy. Open it, and inside are 2 containers and 2 alcohol wipes. Clean the u/s of the uppper arm first to remove any grease on the skin. The two containers both have a peel off foil. In one container is the applicator, in the other is the sensor. Put one on top of the other, push them together where the indicator lines match up. Then you use the now primed applicator to position over the underside of upper arm, you then just push the applicator firmly against the arm and it applies the sensor onto the arm. Lift off the applicator (can be a bit sticky and needs a gentle pull). You then use the reader to start up the sensor. After 60mins it's ready to go for up to 2 weeks.
If you are unsure, ask someone for help or go through the video a few times, it's too expensive to get it wrong.
Here is the video.
Hi,Thank you so very much, i am going to ask my nurse if i can switch to this as i really struggle with the finger pricking - have needle phobia x