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    • 14 hours, 10 minutes ago
      Kristi Warmecke likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      Unlike most of the comments on this subject matter, I have needed glucagon several times per year. I am very active, and work hard around the house. I have a Tandem X2 pump with Control IQ and a Dexcom G7 sensor. However, from time to time, my blood sugars drop quickly, or I spend too much time between taking my meal insulin dose and eating my meal, where I need help. The glucagon has come in very handy. For me, it would be fool-hardy to be caught without it. Regarding cost, the price on glucagon has shot up, drastically, over the past year or two, even with health insurance. Luckily, I was able to find a generic, NOT pre-mixed glucagon. It is referred to as "Glucagon Emergency Kit For Low Blood Sugar 1MG." It's the old fashioned kind where you have to mix it yourself. But, at least I have something in case of an emergency.
    • 17 hours, 33 minutes ago
      eherban1 likes your comment at
      Multiple daily injections (MDI) users: Do you use an app or other device to track your insulin dosing? Share the tools you use in the comments below!
      I use InPen and it's great. Except they aren't keeping up with iOS so you now have to unlock your phone and open the app to check IOB instead of simply looking at the home screen. You can tell when app developers aren't users, otherwise they'd know how much of a pain this is when you check 50 times a day
    • 18 hours, 34 minutes ago
      Trish Bowers likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      Insurance won't cover and it was several hundred dollars.
    • 18 hours, 36 minutes ago
      Trish Bowers likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      Glucagon is $425 for me on Medicare. It is cheaper to get an ambulance! I have an expired one that will work if I ever need it, but I won't.
    • 18 hours, 37 minutes ago
      Trish Bowers likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      No. During the past century I threw out many glucagon doses about 5 years after each had expired - having never used a single glucagon dose.. This century, two dose kits were disposed of and never used. At this point, in my opinion, with modern tools for accurately monitoring one's body glucose levels, AND common awareness of how one is feeling, severe low BGL can be easily avoided thus not needing "emergency' glucagon. NOTE WELL!!! what I wrote in the last sentence, does NOT apply to the very young, and some newly diagnosed who have not yet mastered insulin dosing and who have not yet been accustomed to recognizing low or quickly dropping BGL.
    • 18 hours, 38 minutes ago
      Trish Bowers likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      I do because it Costc me over $300 to replace it. Too expensive.
    • 19 hours, 4 minutes ago
      John Barbuto likes your comment at
      Multiple daily injections (MDI) users: Do you use an app or other device to track your insulin dosing? Share the tools you use in the comments below!
      Medicare has added FIASP for 2026! Besides the great news of being able to use this once again, it is one of the few fast acting insulins that works with the inPen. I am considering doing that in the new year
    • 19 hours, 5 minutes ago
      John Barbuto likes your comment at
      Multiple daily injections (MDI) users: Do you use an app or other device to track your insulin dosing? Share the tools you use in the comments below!
      Been using fiasp for 2 years (in the UK) and it's significantly better than novorapid. Would highly recommend to everyone, especially if you find your insulin a bit slow to act.
    • 19 hours, 57 minutes ago
      Lozzy E likes your comment at
      Multiple daily injections (MDI) users: Do you use an app or other device to track your insulin dosing? Share the tools you use in the comments below!
      Medicare has added FIASP for 2026! Besides the great news of being able to use this once again, it is one of the few fast acting insulins that works with the inPen. I am considering doing that in the new year
    • 23 hours, 33 minutes ago
      Ahh Life likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      The last Glucagon prescription that I purchased was 15 years ago. Now it's way too expensive because my insurance doesn't cover it. They just want us to either die or use ambulance service to use or send us to ER. Pretty stupid to me. I've had T1D for 52 years and never needed it really. Only 3 times during early morning hypos in 2015-16 I needed rescue to wake me.
    • 1 day, 4 hours ago
      René Wagner likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      My experience over the past 65 years is that a sugary drink and patience will bring me out of a low satisfactorily. If I’m unconscious, as has happened four or five times over that period, the EMTs know what to do.
    • 1 day, 4 hours ago
      René Wagner likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      Glucagon is $425 for me on Medicare. It is cheaper to get an ambulance! I have an expired one that will work if I ever need it, but I won't.
    • 1 day, 4 hours ago
      René Wagner likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      No I haven't a glucagon in yeans. Reason being:, every time I had a prescription, the glucaagon was never used and expired.
    • 1 day, 4 hours ago
      René Wagner likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      No. During the past century I threw out many glucagon doses about 5 years after each had expired - having never used a single glucagon dose.. This century, two dose kits were disposed of and never used. At this point, in my opinion, with modern tools for accurately monitoring one's body glucose levels, AND common awareness of how one is feeling, severe low BGL can be easily avoided thus not needing "emergency' glucagon. NOTE WELL!!! what I wrote in the last sentence, does NOT apply to the very young, and some newly diagnosed who have not yet mastered insulin dosing and who have not yet been accustomed to recognizing low or quickly dropping BGL.
    • 1 day, 4 hours ago
      René Wagner likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      I do because it Costc me over $300 to replace it. Too expensive.
    • 1 day, 4 hours ago
      René Wagner likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      Insurance won't cover and it was several hundred dollars.
    • 1 day, 4 hours ago
      René Wagner likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      No,insurance won't cover it. T1D for 45+ years and haven't had a situation where I needed it - so far so good
    • 1 day, 7 hours ago
      Vicki Breckenridge likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      Glucagon is $425 for me on Medicare. It is cheaper to get an ambulance! I have an expired one that will work if I ever need it, but I won't.
    • 1 day, 13 hours ago
      Richard likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      No. During the past century I threw out many glucagon doses about 5 years after each had expired - having never used a single glucagon dose.. This century, two dose kits were disposed of and never used. At this point, in my opinion, with modern tools for accurately monitoring one's body glucose levels, AND common awareness of how one is feeling, severe low BGL can be easily avoided thus not needing "emergency' glucagon. NOTE WELL!!! what I wrote in the last sentence, does NOT apply to the very young, and some newly diagnosed who have not yet mastered insulin dosing and who have not yet been accustomed to recognizing low or quickly dropping BGL.
    • 1 day, 15 hours ago
      Dennis Dacey likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      My experience over the past 65 years is that a sugary drink and patience will bring me out of a low satisfactorily. If I’m unconscious, as has happened four or five times over that period, the EMTs know what to do.
    • 1 day, 15 hours ago
      Dennis Dacey likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      Expiration dates are put on by the manufacturerbecause they have to, and almost never indicate the product won't work. I am confident if I need it , it will work.
    • 1 day, 15 hours ago
      Dennis Dacey likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      With the latest monitoring technology I will probably never need it. I did need it a couple of times in the past, many years ago, and I do have expired Glucagon on hand. I do question whether expiration is real, since until it is mixed, what is there to expire?
    • 1 day, 17 hours ago
      ConnieT1D62 likes your comment at
      Have you been diagnosed with neuropathy? If so, please share your top management tips in the comments.
      My endocrinologist is very good about following the standards of care and looks at my feet every three months when I’m in as well as once a year he does a thorough test with a microfilament and a tuning fork regarding my feet. He says that there is mild neuropathy and at this point, it has not caused me any real problem no pain, numbness, tingling. I recently had a nerve conduction test on my hands because there was concern that there might be something going on with my spine and the neurologist did tell me I had some neuropathy in my hands along with carpal tunnel syndrome in both of them. This all was a surprise to me. I have had a complaint of periodic numbness in some fingers of both hands which he said at this point is mainly being caused by carpal tunnel syndrome. So I think a lot of people with diabetes may be unaware of some mild neuropathy unless their doctors are doing regular thorough testing. my cardiologist also suspects that the fact that my blood pressure tends to go all over the place, sometimes being high, and then crashing to extremely low levels is caused by autonomic neuropathy, and I suspect that some of my chronic gastrointestinal distress may also be caused by some neuropathy. diabetes for 64 years so not a surprise.
    • 1 day, 19 hours ago
      Bill Williams likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      I have been a T1D for 57 years. I have not had Glucagon on hand in 25+ years. Normal carb/sugary items seem to be ok.
    • 1 day, 19 hours ago
      Lee Tincher likes your comment at
      Do you have Glucagon on hand that is not expired? If not, please share why in the comments.
      With the latest monitoring technology I will probably never need it. I did need it a couple of times in the past, many years ago, and I do have expired Glucagon on hand. I do question whether expiration is real, since until it is mixed, what is there to expire?
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    If you have played a competitive sport, did you take any precautions with your T1D-related devices?

    Home > LC Polls > If you have played a competitive sport, did you take any precautions with your T1D-related devices?
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    Samantha Walsh

    Samantha Walsh has lived with type 1 diabetes for over five years since 2017. After her T1D diagnosis, she was eager to give back to the diabetes community. She is the Community and Partner Manager for T1D Exchange and helps to manage the Online Community and recruit for the T1D Exchange Registry. Prior to T1D Exchange, Samantha fundraised at Joslin Diabetes Center. She graduated from the University of Massachusetts with a Bachelors degree in sociology and early childhood education.

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    33 Comments

    1. JAY BACHMAN

      At the time I played competitive sports, I only gave myself insulin shots. Mostly 1 dose of NPH per day.

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    2. George Lovelace

      Not much of a Competitor my challenge has only been staying alive but in High School I got onto the Football Field and learned I really didn’t belong there and like Jay Bachman it was 1 shot of NPH a Day

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    3. Ernie Richmann

      I ran competitively and currently walk competitively. Also throw the discus competitively. I make adjustments in the basal and bolus settings as well as using the exercise function during walks. Training for a 100k walk. I will be 75 in March.

      4
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Lynda Finch

        wow!

        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    4. Patrick Burner

      I ran Cross-Country in high school. Long enough ago there was no devices. I checked my blood sugar 30 minutes before a race and ate a banana and washed it down with an Ensure.

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    5. Yaffa Steubinger

      I didn’t play a competitive sport with type one but now I’m a fitness instructor. So I always start my classes with my sugar a little higher than normal and keep a bottle of glucose close by.

      2
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    6. Daniel Bestvater

      I did sports & triathlon’s on and off through high school and university. Mainly before using a pump. So I would carb up before and often drink tang while doing the activity. I usually had to drive my BG above 10(180) or I would become hypoglycemic.

      2
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    7. Lawrence S.

      Luckily, I made it through high school before I was diagnosed with T1D. So, I played football. However, I don’t think it would have been possible back in the 1960’s-70 to play. I was not aware of any diabetics playing. However, I played lots of competitive sports when I became a diabetic. Early on, before blood tests, insulin pumps and CGM, I ate a lot of food before and during playing golf, running events, softball and track and field events. I had my low BS, but always had food or juices with me. As time went by and technology improved, I constantly checked my blood sugars and either ate more, or took less insulin, usually before an event. I have been a distance runner most of my life and drank lots and lots of bottles of juice. More recently, with CGM’s, insulin pumps, and Tandem Control IQ, I use a variety of techniques, that involve drinking protein softies, juices, removing my insulin pump while I’m running (or just disconnecting while running), and taking less insulin at the meal before my activity.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    8. cynthia jaworski

      Thee question is about handling devices, not handling t1d. In the days when I had been on swim teams an soccer teams, no devices had yet been invented. Not even glucose meters. In a way, that meant fewer things to worry about. With no devices to be concerned about, my only concern was my well-being. Ha.

      0
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    9. Beckett Nelson

      All my competitive sport days were pre-pump

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    10. Tod Herman

      The times when I played/participated in competitive sports I was not yet using any CGMs or insulin pumps. I was only using the MDI method and test strips.

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    11. Clare Tuson

      I did competitive gymnastics but it was in the 70’s there were no devices.

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    12. fletchina

      I wear my pump in my bra so didn’t take any special precautions

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    13. Gerald Oefelein

      I currently play pickleball. I wear my t:slim x2 on my waistband.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    14. mlettinga

      I have a setting in my profiles that is set up with my unique Basel and bolus settings. The activity setting doesn’t work for endurance or competitive sports. I also make sure I have a carbs on hand. I also drink protein drink

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    15. Lynda Finch

      I turned on Activity mode on my Omnipod device in order to hold insulin.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    16. Eva

      Playing tennis I use a polyester waistband were I place my pump to be secure on my body and I have pockets where I can place glucose tabs. It gets hot on the court so I place my glucose meter in a pocket on the side of my cooler. Regulations require us to turn off all cell phones so I don’t use my CGM.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Eva

        As far as the precautions I take for myself to stay in the game, I start with BG greater than 140. I only bolus 50% of the total. My meals before a match are mostly protein and lots of fat (avocado, olive oil, coconut). I don’t drop my basal cause my cells need energy.

        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    17. Bob Durstenfeld

      When I played waterpolo in high-school in the late 1960s and early 1970s there were no devices for managing diabetes.
      I rejoice in their existence now.

      0
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    18. Susan Wood

      When I was of an age that I could participate in a competitive sport, insulin pumps and self management was just being found/created. I did some sports and worked lots of jobs after school but always had difficulty balancing long acting insulins and playing sports. I ended up with many severe insulin lows.

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    19. Dave Akers

      Waterpolo is a very “hands on” sport. Difficult to keep a sensor attached through practice for games… didn’t need to worry about pump as I switched to AFREZZA and Tresiba.

      I tried Eversense sensor and simply took off transmitter and that worked well! Nobpost sensors, but I didn’t like it enough compared to Dexcom so switched back and found “CoBand” worked well.

      Swimming… no problem keeping Dexcom sensor on… just stay away from rubbing in lanelines .

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    20. MT

      In my youth, when I played sports the only diabetes devices were syringes, test tubes and urine tablets. And I never carried these with me, so the answer is no.

      2
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    21. KarenM6

      I used to play soccer and I used to bowl. I also participated in Interim flag football one term. I don’t recall doing anything special, but it was a long time ago and I just don’t remember.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    22. ConnieT1D62

      No competitive sports activities, but in my younger years (long before the use of pumps and CGMs – or even BG meters) I participated in live performance dance and musical theatre with several weeks of rehearsals followed by a stretch of live performance dates for the run of a show. I did this all the way into my late 30s. Didn’t do anything special except to have glucose tabs, OJ and hard candies on hand as a quick fix to treat hypos, and I ate sensible meals early in the day on a regular schedule so I wouldn’t be overloaded with food digesting during a performance. In those days I was on one or two shots of NPH (as a kid & teen) and then Reg and Lente, as a later teen and in college then Reg and Ultralente as a young adult.
      Didn’t start pumping until 2001 when I was 40 + years into living with T1D.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    23. Anthony Harder

      I played football in high school and college. I wrestled in high school. I played various intermural sports throughout. There were no T1D devices in the mid-‘70’s.

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    24. Kevin Stephani

      I had to extra secure them for obstacle course racing or rock climbing after having them torn off during those activities. Then I figured out for these activities i really dont’ need insulin so I just turn them off but still secure them with extra tape coverage so i can turn them on for meals after activity

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    25. Kristi Warmecke

      No because when I played softball blood sugar meters for at home, were just coming out. It would be another 10 to 15 years before I got my first pump.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    26. A Montalbano

      Sometimes wrapped his pod with kinesiology tape.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    27. Beckie McCammitt

      Took a small bolus of insulin then removed my pump for gymnastics practices and competitions. Would hook back up every hour or so to give more insulin if needed

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    28. Becky Hertz

      No, but only because when I played competitive sports there weren’t any T1D-devices.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    29. John McQuaid

      I competed in Triahtlons for 20 years, including about 10 years while wearing a pump (before the time of CGMs). I wore my pumps during the events including under my wetsuit while swimming. I would cut my basal rate before the event started.
      My biggest problem was highs, not lows. I would get so anxious before the start that my bg would inevitable climb into the 250’s before the gun went off. Mostly I did “sprint” triathlons that were over in an hour and 15 minutes, so I didn’t have too much trouble. Before I had the pump I competed in some longer events which took over six hours and these were much more challenging to manage blood sugar.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    30. Jeff Balbirnie

      As a professional martial arts instructor (a “flavor” of Okinawan Karate), (my paid job 6 days/week) over thirty years, precautions were mandatory! Was n-e-v-e-r a “sport”, but got/gets classified that way by the public…. the short answer is yes. On a traditional karate uniform there is zero (0) place which any tech is remotely safe!!! By virtue of the activity(es) be is solo, partnered or group, the tech, the infusion site, the infusion set will be a target, even if not deliberately. Without fail E-V-E-R it would fly across the room like some kind of throwing star, get pulled off, or simply ripped clean out even during SOLO practices!!!. We were not a full contact school, nor was grappling a highly common thing. We did but not that much. Even so, out/off it came… The only place I could ever get a set to STAY was my hip pointer region, (yeah there). Consequently tech was NEVER a positive experience, not once. Traditional weapons training was the sole time I took it completely off. The purpose is/was to wear it, not remove it, right?! So it only came off when the possibility of it becoming a danger was likely. Tubing versus metal/wood, or sharp edges are unsafe for others even m9re than myself, so off it came… Never found a positive outcome to these nightmares, but once entirely removed (permanently) the problems all disappeared entirely….

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    31. Angie

      We took her pump off during basketball games and just let her stay around 180 for the game. If she went high, we put it back on at halftime to give her a little nasal

      2 years ago Log in to Reply

    If you have played a competitive sport, did you take any precautions with your T1D-related devices? Cancel reply

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