rebrascora
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
- Pronouns
- She/Her
It definitely bugs me about ruining my TIR and it causes a little resentment towards Libre because I am then torn between taking carbs on board when it drops into the red even when a finger prick shows I am not hypo just to mitigate it for my stats or leaving it and making it look like I am neglecting my diabetes.I’ve been following your evening Levemir experiments with interest. Don’t you just hate it when the Libre has you dipping in and out of the very top of the red half the night, because it a) ruins your Time in Range, and b) makes the practice nurse faint because the summary says 'you had 15 hypos this week' 'Yes, but they were all in same two nights as I dipped in and out, and I was at least 3.8 at all times, and the Libre reads lower, especially when I’m a bit dehydrated! Please don’t write on my notes that I had 15 hypos last week!'
I have to say, I don't worry about my practice nurse as, firstly, she is lovely and totally understanding but secondly, doesn't see my Libre unless I offer to show her it. My consultant is extremely happy with my diabetes control and my approach to my management and I have no worries that I can explain anything on my graph that he wants to query. I think he is also aware that Libre is not overly accurate and often reads lower.
I tend to average about 1 hypo a day according to Libre, but most of those are borderline or not hypo at all and my BG meter can mostly corroborate that although I have to be honest, I don't always double check with it, especially if I can feel it is definitely a hypo or I know I have mistimed my breakfast or something stupid like that.
I do wonder at our mentality that we are more concerned about justifying our less good results to a health care professional than being concerned about them ourselves. I know that self awareness is important in lots of ways with diabetes and I am constantly reassessing how casual my attitude is towards hypos and if I am perhaps becoming a bit too careless or blase. I know it is a fine balance, but fear of them was crippling, so I am happy with my current mindset and I think my records show that I am tweaking my basal whenever necessary to tackle problems.
I think, since my DAFNE course, I feel much more confident about justifying my actions to any health care professional who wants to challenge them as well as feeling much more confident about managing my diabetes itself. Funny that a course, the title of which nearly put me off attending, because of course I don't "eat normally" and much of the course being about carb counting, which was not exactly applicable for me, should help me so much.