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    • 2 hours, 6 minutes ago
      kristina blake likes your comment at
      Would you participate in a fully virtual research study with no in-person visits?
      Several years ago I participated in a study assesing the value of regular counseliing and guidance, through virtual appointments for CGM users. I participated because they provided Dexcom G6 devices for the first 6 months of the study and I had wanted to experience life with a CGM. Because it was all virtual I was able to participate from a variety of locations visited during a cross country road trip, VA to CA, including Rapid Cty, SLC and the Bay area in CA. The experience with CGM was such a benefit that after the 6 month period I continued in the study, but purchased Dexcom G6s myself - not covered by my insurance! I would not have considered purchasing the CGM without the positive experience.
    • 2 hours, 8 minutes ago
      kristina blake likes your comment at
      Would you participate in a fully virtual research study with no in-person visits?
      Depends on what it is. Generally they do not want older adults
    • 3 hours, 4 minutes ago
      Ahh Life likes your comment at
      Would you participate in a fully virtual research study with no in-person visits?
      Several years ago I participated in a study assesing the value of regular counseliing and guidance, through virtual appointments for CGM users. I participated because they provided Dexcom G6 devices for the first 6 months of the study and I had wanted to experience life with a CGM. Because it was all virtual I was able to participate from a variety of locations visited during a cross country road trip, VA to CA, including Rapid Cty, SLC and the Bay area in CA. The experience with CGM was such a benefit that after the 6 month period I continued in the study, but purchased Dexcom G6s myself - not covered by my insurance! I would not have considered purchasing the CGM without the positive experience.
    • 3 hours, 38 minutes ago
      Steve Rumble likes your comment at
      Would you participate in a fully virtual research study with no in-person visits?
      Depends on what it is. Generally they do not want older adults
    • 3 hours, 47 minutes ago
      Anita Stokar likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      There are many concerns, one being if I'll still be alive if it's ever offered :)
    • 3 hours, 48 minutes ago
      Anita Stokar likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      Read up on Eladon and Tegoprubart. You might be shocked at the lack of side effects. Although I’m interested to hear how long term goes in the next few years.
    • 4 hours, 3 minutes ago
      John Barbuto likes your comment at
      Would you participate in a fully virtual research study with no in-person visits?
      Depends on what it is. Generally they do not want older adults
    • 5 hours, 3 minutes ago
      KCR likes your comment at
      Would you participate in a fully virtual research study with no in-person visits?
      Depends on what it is. Generally they do not want older adults
    • 5 hours, 23 minutes ago
      Kathy Hanavan likes your comment at
      Would you participate in a fully virtual research study with no in-person visits?
      Depends on what it is. Generally they do not want older adults
    • 5 hours, 38 minutes ago
      lis be likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      There are many concerns, one being if I'll still be alive if it's ever offered :)
    • 5 hours, 38 minutes ago
      lis be likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      General access to islet transplants is still years away. FDA has to deem it safe. Though, I am excited about the possibility.
    • 5 hours, 42 minutes ago
      TEH likes your comment at
      Would you participate in a fully virtual research study with no in-person visits?
      Depends on what it is. Generally they do not want older adults
    • 23 hours, 8 minutes ago
      KarenM6 likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      There are many concerns, one being if I'll still be alive if it's ever offered :)
    • 23 hours, 8 minutes ago
      KarenM6 likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      At 78 I don't think islet transplantation will affect my life course. Big pharma sees biological treatments as the path to ever higher profits, not constrained by patent terms the way drugs are. Most diabetics would be better served by an improved standard of care from the ADA and the medical community.
    • 1 day ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      Very, but more worried about it even making to the FDA and approved there first.
    • 1 day ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      There are many concerns, one being if I'll still be alive if it's ever offered :)
    • 1 day ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      At 78 I don't think islet transplantation will affect my life course. Big pharma sees biological treatments as the path to ever higher profits, not constrained by patent terms the way drugs are. Most diabetics would be better served by an improved standard of care from the ADA and the medical community.
    • 1 day ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      Severe case of hardening of the “oughteries” here. Ought we be concerned with cost, insurance, coverage, hail storms, earthquakes? ▄█▀█● Why are we not homeschooled to enjoy the progress being made?
    • 1 day ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      While those items are very much a concern, there are other factors that are more concerning ie immunosuppressant.
    • 1 day ago
      Amanda Barras likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      If they can transplant them such that we do not need immunosuppresants, we'd be fine. Otherwise, those meds are just one more thing that could become in short supply. But at least we could go through scanners at the airports and travel without huge bags of supplies.
    • 1 day ago
      Amanda Barras likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      General access to islet transplants is still years away. FDA has to deem it safe. Though, I am excited about the possibility.
    • 1 day ago
      Amanda Barras likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      At 78 I don't think islet transplantation will affect my life course. Big pharma sees biological treatments as the path to ever higher profits, not constrained by patent terms the way drugs are. Most diabetics would be better served by an improved standard of care from the ADA and the medical community.
    • 1 day, 2 hours ago
      Patricia Dalrymple likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      If they can transplant them such that we do not need immunosuppresants, we'd be fine. Otherwise, those meds are just one more thing that could become in short supply. But at least we could go through scanners at the airports and travel without huge bags of supplies.
    • 1 day, 3 hours ago
      Gerald Oefelein likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      If they can transplant them such that we do not need immunosuppresants, we'd be fine. Otherwise, those meds are just one more thing that could become in short supply. But at least we could go through scanners at the airports and travel without huge bags of supplies.
    • 1 day, 3 hours ago
      Gerald Oefelein likes your comment at
      How concerned are you about potential barriers to islet cell transplantation, such as cost, access, eligibility, or insurance approval?
      While those items are very much a concern, there are other factors that are more concerning ie immunosuppressant.
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    In a typical week, how often are you woken up by your CGM or other diabetes-related alarms (such as, for a low or a high alert)?

    Home > LC Polls > In a typical week, how often are you woken up by your CGM or other diabetes-related alarms (such as, for a low or a high alert)?
    Previous

    On a scale of 1-5, how much are your personal relationships (social and intimate) affected by living with T1D? (5 = the most affected, 1 = the least affected)

    Next

    If you’re a caregiver of a child living with type 1, how often do you wake your child up when they need a low snack in the middle of the night?

    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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    26 Comments

    1. Trina Blake

      Every “night” – sometimes I sleep during the day, other times my schedule allows me to be a regular person and sleep at night. I also have my alarms set to a very narrow range – 60 for low alerts and 120 for high alerts (I like to nip highs in the bud)

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    2. A Montalbano

      Used to be almost every night, multiple hours of management even on closed loop. Most common was compression lows that led to turning off basal and subsequent highs OR poor communication between devices putting it in limited mode.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    3. Janice B

      For highs or lows rarely woken up.
      However I am woken up every 3 days at 2:00am by OmiPod telling me my pod is about to expire. Wish this was an alarm that could be disabled!

      2
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Kathy Hanavan

        You can change how far ahead the alarm will beep you I think

        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    4. Jane Cerullo

      Can’t win. On MDI. Was injecting long acting in the morning but kept waking up with rising glucose. So switched to night time. Now having lows. Working on it. In process of switching to a tandem pump. Lots of paperwork. Even want a c peptide.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. cynthia jaworski

        Before tresiba, I would split my long-acting dose to a morning plus an evening dose. That worked pretty well, but tresiba is better. Good luck with the pump.

        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    5. TEH

      I have gotten into the habit of checking my BG at bedtime. If it is approaching low I will eat a snack before going to bed. This has helped avoid night time lows for me.

      2
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    6. Carol Evans

      I use Medtronic 770G with Guardian 4 and over 90% of my nights are very stable between 95-115.

      2
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    7. spencercarter1

      I have used Dexcom for years and every night I get woken up from alarms, usually 1-3 times. A few months ago, I removed Dexcom and went back to finger pokes, ~20-30 times a day. My sleep has significantly improved. Perhaps the cost of this is a high in the night that I don’t correct for and we’ll see how my HbA1c has changed. I have a feeling it will be slightly higher, but not by much. I’m wondering if it’s better to get a good night’s sleep or better glucose control. I’m in a sleep study right now for T1Ds and I have come to appreciate the value and benefits that come from better quality sleep. A few months ago I would have never considered not using Dexcom and thought that was crazy. But, I’m really starting to like not using it because my sleep has improved significantly and as a result my health should too. I would be interested in what other’s thoughts are on this and whether you think I should go back to using Dexcom.

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. MT

        I stopped using Guardian sensor for this very same reason. Also gave up the pump and now use Libre 3 with MDI. Way better sleep, way less expensive and still good control. 86% in range after some trial/error.

        1
        2 years ago Log in to Reply
      2. Bob Durstenfeld

        Tim in range matters and the
        cgm is better for that. Seems you need to have some help adjusting your basal rates so you alarm less.

        2 years ago Log in to Reply
      3. Marty

        I also value a good night’s sleep. Cognitive behavioral therapy and a CPAP machine helped me overcome sleep apnea and chronic insomnia. On my endo’s advice, I turned off the high and low alarms on my pump (Tandem with Control IQ). I rely exclusively on my phone alarms, which are set to vibrate. Unless something unusual is going on, my BGs stay within range through the night and CGM alarms almost never wake me up. The benefit has been lower blood pressure, higher energy, and a general sense of well being.

        1
        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    8. Patricia Kilwein

      Didn’t have an option for how many times a night….

      2
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. mojoseje

        Yes, some nights are bad.

        1
        2 years ago Log in to Reply
    9. Steve Rumble

      I answered 5 or 6 times, but that is not exclusively glucose level alerts, many are “loss of signal” alerts from my G7 sensor.

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    10. Lawrence S.

      I answered “3 or 4 nights per week,” but could have easily been “5 or 6 nights per week.” Recently, I’ve been making adjustments to my basal rates after having lots of lows. But, when my alarms go off during the night, it usually doesn’t even measure in my mind unless I’m going very low or very high.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    11. Katherine Kettig

      I do not have alarms on my CGM but do keep it beside me at night and check myself during the night.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    12. John McHenery

      Most common wake up is due to loss of contact with sensor.

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    13. Janis Senungetuk

      I have the alarms set on vibrate because they were disturbing my spouse and our cat. When they wake me it’s rarely because of a high or low alert.My bg level 3 hours ago is not of any value in the middle of the night. Fortunately CIQ works well to keep me around 110 most of the night. I check CGM before going to bed and either take a correction bolus or eat a small snack to prevent a low while sleeping.

      2
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    14. KCR

      I answered 3-4 times a week but 2-3 times is more typical. I love those weeks with no alarms at all so I sleep better!

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    15. Chris Albright

      If I go to bed without a bunch of Basel insulin on board, the Tandem algorithm will stop/decrease my Basel insulin so I stay between 90 and 110(ish) all night

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    16. Dylan Sutton

      Typically for compression lows rather than real low BG. Depending on sensor placement, this may happen once or twice a week or 5 times in the one night.

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    17. Russell Buckbee

      When I take my hearing aids out I can’t hear them.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    18. Steven Gill

      I’m an extremely light sleeper (wake when my cat comes in the pet door across the house), so waking comes easily. My alarms are set 70-130, kind of tight and while Medtronic’s algorithm does great one thing consistent with diabetes is change…

      I clicked 3-4 times a weekly, sometimes for a low (lemonade is on the nightstand), or a trending rise (count the “autobolus, do an easy correction with a pump and roll over).

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    19. Jian

      maybe there is something wrong with me but my CGM alarm goes off more than 6 times a week, I think

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    20. Elizabeth T.

      Of course there’s no such thing as a typical week living with T1D! I can have weeks with no alarms waking me now I’m using Guardian 4s but
      occasionally I’ll have a bad night with 5 or 6 alarms.

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply

    In a typical week, how often are you woken up by your CGM or other diabetes-related alarms (such as, for a low or a high alert)? Cancel reply

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