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    • 3 hours, 58 minutes ago
      Amanda Barras likes your comment at
      How often do you take a “vacation” from wearable diabetes technology (insulin pump, CGM)?
      Never. I have severe hypoglycemic unawareness. No symptoms even at glucose levels of 40.
    • 3 hours, 58 minutes ago
      Amanda Barras likes your comment at
      How often do you take a “vacation” from wearable diabetes technology (insulin pump, CGM)?
      Nope. Love my technology! Having it frees up so much mental bandwidth that I would otherwise have to spend on finger sticks, calculating insulin doses, figuring how much insulin on board, etc. Also, I love not carrying a purse with all that "stuff" everywhere I go - I put my license & credit card in my phone case and I'm hands-free. Absolute magic!
    • 3 hours, 59 minutes ago
      Amanda Barras likes your comment at
      How often do you take a “vacation” from wearable diabetes technology (insulin pump, CGM)?
      Vacation? Sounds like a bad idea, to me.
    • 3 hours, 59 minutes ago
      Amanda Barras likes your comment at
      How often do you take a “vacation” from wearable diabetes technology (insulin pump, CGM)?
      Being on a pump and CGM is not something I would want to be without no matter what. The only way I would ever consider it being a vacation a life long vacation is if I was cured of T1D.
    • 3 hours, 59 minutes ago
      Amanda Barras likes your comment at
      How often do you take a “vacation” from wearable diabetes technology (insulin pump, CGM)?
      What's the alternative? MDI? No thanks. That did not work well for me when I was Dx-ed 35 years ago. I have kept my old 770 Medtronic pump and some resivors & infusion sets to fall back on.
    • 4 hours ago
      Amanda Barras likes your comment at
      How often do you take a “vacation” from wearable diabetes technology (insulin pump, CGM)?
      Only when the pump or sensor fails & I'm not with the next replacement. Not really a vacation. (I've had them fail on vacation, too.)
    • 4 hours ago
      Amanda Barras likes your comment at
      How often do you take a “vacation” from wearable diabetes technology (insulin pump, CGM)?
      as soon as T1D "takes a vacation", then I will too! ;)
    • 4 hours, 58 minutes ago
      Mike S likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      It really depends on where I bottom out. 62 might take 15 minutes. 48 might take several hours. I’ve switched my low treatment from juice to Glow Gummies and my recoveries are both faster and more precise.
    • 8 hours, 5 minutes ago
      TEH likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      It varies significantly I can become hypo instead of hyper due to being sick at times.
    • 8 hours, 9 minutes ago
      KSannie likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      For me, to become functional again after a hypo, it takes about a half an hour. But to fully recover, meaning that I feel like it hadn't happened, is now more than hour. Getting older has definitely expanded those timelines.
    • 8 hours, 9 minutes ago
      KSannie likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      The older I get the longer it takes to recover. Luckily, I don’t have many lows now that I’m on a pump/CGM closed loop system.
    • 8 hours, 57 minutes ago
      lis be likes your comment at
      How often do you take a “vacation” from wearable diabetes technology (insulin pump, CGM)?
      Only when the pump or sensor fails & I'm not with the next replacement. Not really a vacation. (I've had them fail on vacation, too.)
    • 8 hours, 57 minutes ago
      lis be likes your comment at
      How often do you take a “vacation” from wearable diabetes technology (insulin pump, CGM)?
      as soon as T1D "takes a vacation", then I will too! ;)
    • 8 hours, 58 minutes ago
      atr likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      For me, to become functional again after a hypo, it takes about a half an hour. But to fully recover, meaning that I feel like it hadn't happened, is now more than hour. Getting older has definitely expanded those timelines.
    • 8 hours, 58 minutes ago
      lis be likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      A really sticky low means it takes longer than usual for me to recover.
    • 8 hours, 58 minutes ago
      lis be likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      For me, to become functional again after a hypo, it takes about a half an hour. But to fully recover, meaning that I feel like it hadn't happened, is now more than hour. Getting older has definitely expanded those timelines.
    • 8 hours, 58 minutes ago
      lis be likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      The older I get the longer it takes to recover. Luckily, I don’t have many lows now that I’m on a pump/CGM closed loop system.
    • 8 hours, 59 minutes ago
      atr likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      The older I get the longer it takes to recover. Luckily, I don’t have many lows now that I’m on a pump/CGM closed loop system.
    • 9 hours, 5 minutes ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      A really sticky low means it takes longer than usual for me to recover.
    • 9 hours, 5 minutes ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      For me, to become functional again after a hypo, it takes about a half an hour. But to fully recover, meaning that I feel like it hadn't happened, is now more than hour. Getting older has definitely expanded those timelines.
    • 9 hours, 5 minutes ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      The older I get the longer it takes to recover. Luckily, I don’t have many lows now that I’m on a pump/CGM closed loop system.
    • 9 hours, 6 minutes ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      It varies significantly I can become hypo instead of hyper due to being sick at times.
    • 9 hours, 23 minutes ago
      KCR likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      For me, to become functional again after a hypo, it takes about a half an hour. But to fully recover, meaning that I feel like it hadn't happened, is now more than hour. Getting older has definitely expanded those timelines.
    • 9 hours, 23 minutes ago
      KCR likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      The older I get the longer it takes to recover. Luckily, I don’t have many lows now that I’m on a pump/CGM closed loop system.
    • 9 hours, 46 minutes ago
      Meerkat likes your comment at
      On average, how long does it take you to recover from a low glucose episode?
      For me, to become functional again after a hypo, it takes about a half an hour. But to fully recover, meaning that I feel like it hadn't happened, is now more than hour. Getting older has definitely expanded those timelines.
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    When you have an overnight low or high that you need wake up to treat, how often does your spouse or romantic partner also wake up?

    Home > LC Polls > When you have an overnight low or high that you need wake up to treat, how often does your spouse or romantic partner also wake up?
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    How often do you need to ration your insulin supplies because you’re concerned you could not afford to use it as prescribed? If you're comfortable share more about your experience in the comments.

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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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    14 Comments

    1. Molly Jones

      My husband is an incredibly light sleeper and wakes up to all of the alerts on my meter and phone app no matter how they are set. He often changes bedrooms, sometimes due to alerts, or just because he is awake.
      I rarely if ever wake to these anymore. If I desired to wake, I would need to rotate through the alert sounds. Control-IQ seems to take control. My primary family are/ were very heavy sleepers.

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

      I said, “Sometimes.” I think I catch most of the alarms. But, sometimes, my wife wakes me to say, “your alarm is going off.”
      After years of hearing alarms and buzzes, I often don’t hear them. I also think this is a mechanism to allow me to get some sleep.

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    3. george lovelace

      I’m recently Widowed but before it was rarely occurring. In younger days it was a horror trying to wake from an NPH caused Low

      1
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    4. Annie Wall

      Rarely. I have my phone on do not disturb and my pump’s alerts are all on vibration so any that come during the night mostly just awaken me so I can simply, quiety handle a low or a high and don’t have to bother him. So much better with CIQ and eons better than the old days, when I would wake up and find a team of paramedics and my husband trying to get my blood glucose back up!

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    5. spencercarter1

      My wife sleeps like a log every night and doesn’t usually wake when I do, which is multiple times each night. And yet, she complains that I get up too much. I eventually started sleeping on the couch downstairs a few years ago. I now sleep in a separate bedroom, all for this reason. This has not been good for our marriage, but my wife prefers it this way.

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

      Sometimes my partner is romantic.

      3
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    7. Ceolmhor

      I answered “Always”, but that isn’t actually true. It was as close as I could come from the available choices to describing our situation. We sleep in separate bedrooms precisely because she’s a light sleeper who can’t get back to sleep if she wakes up during the night, and she’s always awakened if my alarm goes off in the same room.

      3
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    8. Lori COLLINS

      Thanks to Medtronic’s 780G and G4 sensors my night time lows and highs have been essentially eliminated and we are both sleeping much better. Prior to this Improvement in technology, I would occasionally wake him up with alarms.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    9. Kathleen Juzenas

      Always. Unfortunately I’m hard of hearing, don’t wear hearing aids at night, and don’t usually hear alarms. My night owl husband is sometimes still awake or is woken by my alarms to wake me. All much to our mutual chagrin.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    10. Anthony Harder

      I replied “sometimes”. My partner and I have different sleeping schedules. She is an “owl” and up late, while I am a “lark” and up early. When I first started using a CGM, she woke up whenever it went off. Now, she only does some of the time.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    11. Mick Martin

      I chose “Never” as I sleep in a hospital bed on the ground floor and my wife sleeps in a bed upstairs.

      When I was able to get up the stairs, and we shared a bed, my wife used to wake up on the vast majority of occasions when I woke up to treat a high or a low.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    12. Ahh Life

      Silence speaks volumes. I almost prefer vibration-konks-you-in-the-head to the hideous sounds of a sour pump. Spouse agrees. 🙃

      2
      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    13. Craig Suchin

      Rarely

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    14. Sue Herflicker

      I picked sometimes, because he follows me on his phone only when I am an urgent low will his phone go off. Thank goodness they are far and few between.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply

    When you have an overnight low or high that you need wake up to treat, how often does your spouse or romantic partner also wake up? Cancel reply

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