Next time you could try holding the pen upright, ( needle pointing straight up, I mean) dialling up a few units, and shooting it towards the ceiling, sometimes gets rid of the bubble.Had to discard of a pen with nearly 50 units left in it as the insulin wasn't coming out properly due to an air bubble and no matter what I did I just couldn't get rid of itx
I did that more than once, it just would not shift, therefore the insulin wasn't coming out in a continuous leak if that's how you'd put it haha, never had that problem before so just decided it was best to give up on it xNext time you could try holding the pen upright, ( needle pointing straight up, I mean) dialling up a few units, and shooting it towards the ceiling, sometimes gets rid of the bubble.
Just what I was put onto and I really like them, and nope the needle is always taken off straight after injecting xEr, why are you still using disposable pens? Take up far too much room in the fridge when you have as in my case when I first went onto pens - two boxes of fast acting and one of slow on repeat, order before I'm on the last single on of either, so often 6 of the gurt great things in my fridge. And - very environmentally unfriendly.
The initial cost of a refillable pen is more than a single disposable one but it's a one-off cost (my last Novopens had lasted me about 9 years by the time I went onto a pump) and the boxes of 5 cartridges are far smaller, and only the cartridges themselves to go into landfill.
Disposable pens are definitely more cheaply made - flimsier than refillable ones, hence less mechanical type problems.
Had you perchance ever left a needle on that pen after you used it instead of removing it straight after use? - cos sometimes, that can be the route via which air can be introduced. If you are eg out and about, still remove the needle after jabbing after first putting the thin needle cover back on, then back into the outer needle cover, then secreting it wherever you can till you can dispose of it properly. (there's a zip compartment in my meter case, but anyway there's always one in handbags and two in my purse!
I don't generally think disposables are more accurate than reusables, I just have particular concern about my current reusable - if you do 1 unit test shots with it, it's pot luck whether anything comes out at all - which if I want to do a 1 unit correction is a real problem. I don't expect them to all have that issue, but I confess that it has rather put me off them. It also worries me what I'd do if the reusable were to break (because I get paranoid about things like that 😳 ). That's not an issue with disposables because you can just change the pen out. Honestly - I far preferred syringes to pens! Felt safer with what I was injecting and didn't have the constant annoying dripping while I'm pondering over where to stick it!Sorry - you've completely lost me there! How/why could a disposable pen be more accurate than a refillable one? Do you think syringes are less accurate than disposable pens too?
Hi @Ginny03 . Just a thought, When you do a test 1 unit shot with the refillable pen, have you done the 2units air shot first to fill the needleI don't generally think disposables are more accurate than reusables, I just have particular concern about my current reusable - if you do 1 unit test shots with it, it's pot luck whether anything comes out at all - which if I want to do a 1 unit correction is a real problem. I don't expect them to all have that issue, but I confess that it has rather put me off them. It also worries me what I'd do if the reusable were to break (because I get paranoid about things like that 😳 ). That's not an issue with disposables because you can just change the pen out. Honestly - I far preferred syringes to pens! Felt safer with what I was injecting and didn't have the constant annoying dripping while I'm pondering over where to stick it!
Had to discard of a pen with nearly 50 units left in it as the insulin wasn't coming out properly due to an air bubble and no matter what I did I just couldn't get rid of itx
Always! And i haven't been happy with it from the start - maybe I just got a dud.Hi @Ginny03 . Just a thought, When you do a test 1 unit shot with the refillable pen, have you done the 2units air shot first to fill the needle
Yes, I have to say despite having a huge amount of respect for my DSN I can't see how she could possibly be right in saying it evens out in the long run!I would reject the argument that a disposable costs the same as a reusable in the long run, there are more materials involved and a more complicated manufacturing process for every pen compared to one pen and endless cartridges.
Which is why everyone who does use reusable ones should always have reliable spare handy! 😱 🙂There is one major advantage to a disposable pen though. Unless you happen to have a spare one nearby, if you lose or break a reuseable pen, you're screwed until you can convince a GP to see you/phone you, issue a prescription and then find a chemist that has it in stock. At least with a disposable one you've probably got another in the fridge.