mum2westiesGill
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
Hi, I'm just wondering apart from myself if there are any Type 1"s who does finger pricking instead of using the libre?
I finger prick 🙂 A Type 1 friend does too.
Hi Gill
I use a sensor but still use finger pricks at each meal and before bed to calibrate my sensor. It also ensures my bolus is based on current BG rather than sensor glucose with the time lag.
because using a sensor allows you to see when spikes occur so you can fine tune your prebolusing to stop it is just one of the reasons I do both, also I can see what's going on 24/7 where I wouldn't pick up on things with just finger pricking but as you don't use the data from a sensor it may just be better for you to completely put the idea to bed for now until you have a better understanding of things xxif your finger pricking and basing your bolus on the finger pricking/current BG why do you use a sensor?
HelloThanks @Inka - so that makes 3 of us - do we have any more?
Finger pricks only tell you what's happening at the moment you do them. The sensor tells you what's happening in between. The combined information can make bolus calculations more accurate. If you just finger-prick before a meal you get a figure, but without the sensor you don't know if you're coming down from a high, coming up from a low, or just keeping steady. This might affect your bolus calculation in that, for instance, you might want to add a unit or two to correct a high-ish FP reading but if you didn't know that your BG was already heading fast downwards, you could then end up hypo.
Yes, I still rely on FPs for bolus calculations, but I wouldn't be wihout my Libre for anything - it's not so much about the figures but the "direction of travel".
Do you do a finger prick and also a sensor scan before a meal?because using a sensor allows you to see when spikes occur so you can fine tune your prebolusing to stop it is just one of the reasons I do both, also I can see what's going on 24/7 where I wouldn't pick up on things with just finger pricking but as you don't use the data from a sensor it may just be better for you to completely put the idea to bed for now until you have a better understanding of things xx
Yes, that's when I see how close they are too each other and I log the finger prick reading in the scan reading and also how much insulin I'll be giving, even the difference of 1mmol can mean an increase or decrease in bolus for me so it's safer for me to do it that way and my team are quite happy with me doing it the way I am xxDo you do a finger prick and also a sensor scan before a meal?
Yes, that's when I see how close they are too each other and I log the finger prick reading in the scan reading and also how much insulin I'll be giving, even the difference of 1mmol can mean an increase or decrease in bolus for me so it's safer for me to do it that way and my team are quite happy with me doing it the way I am xx
One of the videos (advising on understanding the Libre arrows, I think) suggests considering doing that if it shows you're going up before eating (and considering subtracting a unit or two if you're going down).When would you add a unit or two on?
Is that if you're going up or down fast or slowly?One of the videos (advising on understanding the Libre arrows, I think) suggests considering doing that if it shows you're going up before eating (and considering subtracting a unit or two if you're going down).
I don't recall the details of the advice, and it'll depend how many units you were intending to use (adding a unit to a 14 unit dose is different to adding one to a 4 unit dose).Is that if you're going up or down fast or slowly?