You both beat me. I'm at a mere 31, which I think includes a few hours of the non-functioning Libre 2 (though maybe it decided it was broken and those lows have been removed).70! Mostly at night.
No, I switch it off at night, else some nights I'd get no sleep.. If I'm genuinely hypo, I wake up on my own. My 'below target' is currently 4%, and my ‘very low' stats are zero. I do have a very peculiar night time pattern, where my BG always falls as soon as my head touches the pillow (irrespective of when or how much basal, I have done a lot of experimenting) then hovers just above the red, or just dips in, for a few hours, then rises again from 4am.Hi @Robin, do you use a night time alarm? Does it wake you up?
Well, A*, obvs!I can’t decide if I’m just an A* diabetic or a fraud! 😉
PS no showing of “high events!” 😳
I find this interesting when compared to finger pricking only and wonder how many of those "hypos" matter.
I am not belittling the danger of hypos and try to avoid them. But when finger pricking we only know our readings at the point we prick. We do not know if we go just below 4 or just over 10 because the timing of out bolus was "off" for example.
I thought about his when I was completing my DIAB1 form for my driving license. In the past, I was unaware of any of those dips below 4 and, to the best of my knowledge, I answered "No" to the "Have you had a hypo in the last year?" question. On my latest form, I answered "Yes" although I doubt there is a huge amount of difference in my hypos (I fair better in the top end so my HBA1c has come down) as most hypos are short dalliances into the 3s.
I wonder if, in the world of CGMs, this question will be considered more to weed out those who are hypo unaware or lying or will DVLA start asking about Time In Range?
As I was honestly able to answer the question regarding assistance to treat my hypos with a "No", my license was renewed within less than a week.
I've found that my hospital clinic conversations have always been sensible, and their concern is making sure I have full hypo awareness (they obviously have a tick box, because it gets awarded a score when they write their report). Though having agreed with me fully, the last doctor I spoke to then suggested I set the low glucose alarm at a low level, despite just having discussed with me the futility of doing so! I guess he had another box to tick - 'Advised Patient to set alarm'. A previous doctor also wrote on the report that I should lower my night time basal, despite having agreed with me on the phone that it wouldn’t work!I am very prone to nocturnal hypos after exercise and my evening basal dose is a bit of an educated guessing game almost every night because my night time needs seem to vary significantly. It doesn't worry me and I have good awareness and my consultant is not concerned either and is very happy with my results. I actually prompted a discussion of this very subject last month during my telephone appointment.
19 in 90 days, but the alarms have deffo helped me fend them off. Prior to Libre 2 my rate would have been much higher.
In the old finger pricking days the Consultant or DSN would ask at the yearly check in 'How is the hypo situation?' I would shrug my shoulders and we would discuss other things. In this age of Libre snooping, there is no hiding the hypos, or hypers.
Forgive me Consultant/DSN, it's been too long since my last confession, in the last 3 months I have commited 47 hypos.
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If any of you sinners would like to compare and contrast, feel free to unburden yourself.
Given finger prick meters have a 15% accuracy on tolerance, carbs quoted on food are averages, there are many things that affect blood sugars, no one who understands diabetes is looking for “statistics to stand up to scrutiny”. It is about living within guide rails.The trouble is that many of these are false readings from failing sensors or just in spec low-reading sensors and very few were deep hypos. I'm not in denial on this, just frustrated that this statistic doesn't stand up to scrutiny.
But you've got a good spread across the 24 hrs!