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    • 46 minutes ago
      René Wagner likes your comment at
      Have you had to switch diabetes medications in the past year due to health insurance changes?
      I hate formulary changes mid year. They should not be allowed!
    • 47 minutes ago
      René Wagner likes your comment at
      Have you had to switch diabetes medications in the past year due to health insurance changes?
      I will be possibly switching from Humalog to Novalog next year. There is NO Medicare Part D plan in my county that now covers Humalog. Complicated by the fact that I use a Humalog specific Smart Pen, it will be one more hassle in T1 world. My endo will submit a formulary exception request next year. My hoarded supply of cartridges will carry me through while waiting for the response 🤞🏻I cannot believe that this is the broken system that we have to settle for in the richest country in the world.
    • 9 hours, 59 minutes ago
      NANCY NECIA likes your comment at
      Have you had to switch diabetes medications in the past year due to health insurance changes?
      My doctor switched me without telling me from Humalog to novolog and told me it was due to insurance. I’m on Medicare and I never saw anything that said that was necessary. They call me periodically to see how I’m doing and I told them I didn’t appreciate being switched without being told. I thought initially it was a mistake when I picked it up at the pharmacy but they said that’s what the doctor ordered. Then the next visit, he told me all my issues with insulin switching and preauthorization holdups was my fault basically because he says “I have the wrong insurance”. Like I’m going to NOT use Medicare. My opinion? I think I have the wrong doctor, but it’s a hassle to switch.
    • 10 hours ago
      NANCY NECIA likes your comment at
      Have you had to switch diabetes medications in the past year due to health insurance changes?
      Not this year, but in 2026, I need to switch from Humalog to Novolog.
    • 12 hours, 30 minutes ago
      mojoseje likes your comment at
      Have you had to switch diabetes medications in the past year due to health insurance changes?
      NEVER accerptable or appropriate. Nobody's healthcare should ever be determined by a third party's profit margin(s) to determine what we are forced to take.
    • 14 hours, 32 minutes ago
      Phyllis Biederman likes your comment at
      Have you had to switch diabetes medications in the past year due to health insurance changes?
      My doctor switched me without telling me from Humalog to novolog and told me it was due to insurance. I’m on Medicare and I never saw anything that said that was necessary. They call me periodically to see how I’m doing and I told them I didn’t appreciate being switched without being told. I thought initially it was a mistake when I picked it up at the pharmacy but they said that’s what the doctor ordered. Then the next visit, he told me all my issues with insulin switching and preauthorization holdups was my fault basically because he says “I have the wrong insurance”. Like I’m going to NOT use Medicare. My opinion? I think I have the wrong doctor, but it’s a hassle to switch.
    • 14 hours, 50 minutes ago
      Lawrence S. 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.
    • 14 hours, 51 minutes ago
      Marty likes your comment at
      Have you had to switch diabetes medications in the past year due to health insurance changes?
      Had to, no. But Medicare is adding coverage for FIASP in '26 so it will be "bye, bye, bye, bye, bye" to Lyumjev!
    • 15 hours, 43 minutes ago
      Gerald Oefelein likes your comment at
      Have you had to switch diabetes medications in the past year due to health insurance changes?
      Had to, no. But Medicare is adding coverage for FIASP in '26 so it will be "bye, bye, bye, bye, bye" to Lyumjev!
    • 15 hours, 58 minutes ago
      Scott Rudolph likes your comment at
      Have you had to switch diabetes medications in the past year due to health insurance changes?
      Had to, no. But Medicare is adding coverage for FIASP in '26 so it will be "bye, bye, bye, bye, bye" to Lyumjev!
    • 1 day, 12 hours 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
    • 1 day, 13 hours 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.
    • 1 day, 13 hours 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.
    • 1 day, 13 hours 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.
    • 1 day, 13 hours 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.
    • 1 day, 14 hours 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
    • 1 day, 14 hours 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.
    • 1 day, 15 hours 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
    • 1 day, 18 hours 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, 23 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, 23 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, 23 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, 23 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.
    • 2 days 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.
    • 2 days 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.
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    Do you currently take medication to reduce insulin resistance (e.g., metformin, thiazolidinediones)? If so, when did you start the medication?

    Home > LC Polls > Do you currently take medication to reduce insulin resistance (e.g., metformin, thiazolidinediones)? If so, when did you start the medication?
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    If you use a CGM, do you usually hear and wake up to its alerts while you are sleeping, as opposed to sleeping through the alerts?

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    In honor of GivingTuesday, what are your favorite ways of giving to organizations you support? Select all that apply.

    Sarah Howard

    Sarah Howard has worked in the diabetes research field ever since she was diagnosed with T1D while in college in May 2013. Since then, she has worked for various diabetes organizations, focusing on research, advocacy, and community-building efforts for people with T1D and their loved ones. Sarah is currently the Senior Marketing Manager at T1D Exchange.

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    23 Comments

    1. Steven Gill

      In my original diagnosis was prescribed insulin, than switched to metformin for several weeks. Than after 3 years diet alone prescribed various meds until I was mystically diagnosed TYPE1. The opinion the meds did nothing more than act was a placebo.

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

      I answered no. However, when I was first diagnosed, in 1977, my doctor put me on pills (don’t remember what it was) for a few days. Then, he put me on insulin, and that has been my diabetes medication since then.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    3. Mick Martin

      I have never been prescribed any medication to reduce insulin resistance. In fact, after 40+ years I’m still very insulin sensitive.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    4. Patricia Kilwein

      Still on medication for insulin resistance even tho being diagnosed T1D. It’s because I am very resistant to insulin.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    5. connie ker

      Since I am a T1D LADA, I was treated with metformin by a local GP. It only made me sick and didn’t bring sugars down at all. I gave it up quickly and continued with an endocrinologist for treatment. I have been on insulin ever since, Lantus and Humalog. Happy Birthday Insulin, 100 years old this year!!!!!

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    6. Natalie Daley

      I answered, but five years after I was diagnosed, put on a Draconian diet and lost and let off 25 lbs, my annual A1C was over 12 and my GP wanted to start me on insulin. I insisted on trying pills and was briefly given Diabenase, which did nothing. Then I started 70/30 insulin, and the adventure began.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    7. gary rind

      After being diagnosed as T1D, everything ran smoothly for a while. Then my sugar started taking off overnight, would increase by more than 100 points by the time I woke up. Was taking Lantus back then, eventually my endo prescribed metformin at dinner. Now taking Tresiba so less of a need and have reduced metformin by half.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    8. Mary Dexter

      So the real question is, how many of us were initially misdiagnosed because our doctors couldn’t fathom us being any thing other than T2 since we obviously weren’t little kids.
      The most recent statistics say that 40% are initially misdiagnosed.
      https://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/44/11/2449
      What are organizations like this one going to do about this?

      4
      4 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Sherolyn Newell

        That’s what happened to me when I initially went to a GP. A few months later, I went to an Endo. She took one look at me and said if she was a betting woman, she would bet that I was T1. She did tests and was correct. Switched from metformin to insulin and things got way better quickly.

        1
        4 years ago Log in to Reply
    9. George Hamilton

      I replied with N/A. About 20 years back I was directed by my PCP to try Metformin to deal with insulin resistance. I followed that plan for about a year. No positive results. So we dropped the Metformin, and no insulin increase was needed.

      1
      4 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Amanda Barras

        Same.

        4 years ago Log in to Reply
    10. Kim Murphy

      For just a few months my doc tried it but I had to many lows so she stopped.

      1
      4 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Wanacure

        Kim, are you T1D?

        4 years ago Log in to Reply
    11. Amanda Barras

      I need an “other” category. I was on Metformine for about a year at 20 years post T1dx but I struggled to remember to take my morning dose and even when I did it only lowered my afternoon insulin by a tiny bit and it wasn’t worth the hassle and cost of another drug on board to lower my insulin needs so I stopped taking it.

      1
      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    12. Francisco Varea

      I was originally misdiagnosed as T2. Took Glucovance for a few years, until I was diagnosed as T1. Then I went on insulin. Now I take insulin, plus Trulicity and Actos as I have developed strong insulin resistance.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    13. kristina blake

      Following this. T1D for 40 years. I have noticed that insulin isn’t working as well as it used to, I do have a grandmother who had T2D, so I’m not immune to T2D (too bad there isn’t a medical issues “okay you have type 1 D, you’ve met your quota”) I am going to suggest Ozempic or Jarxiga. Wish me luck. I also have about 15 lbs to lose so that would be a benefit as well. I do know that T1D folks have had success with it.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    14. Jneticdiabetic

      I have never been prescribed oral diabetes medications and remain insulin sensitive 26 years post diagnosis.
      My mother developed T1D in her 50s, and as others who presented later in adulthood have mentioned, she was initially misdiagnosed as a type 2 and prescribed metformin and then other oral medications with no effect. She continued to have passing blood sugars in the 300s and to lose weight. We finally convinced the GP to run autoantibodies & c-peptide, which confirmed autoimmune T1D. Insulin did the trick! She is not required any further medication for insulin resistance.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    15. Becky Hertz

      I’ve been taking Victoza for quite a while. Not sure how long, but years.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    16. Kristine Warmecke

      I answered NO, because I’m not currently on one. I was however on Rezulin before it was pulled. We tried the others but I had major side effect’s from them.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    17. Bonatay

      Yes, 30 yrs after diagnosis. However, it was only for 4 months. It did nothing for me so she stopped it.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    18. LizB

      I have never been on any oral pills or any injectable other than insulin. Even though I am overweight my TDD is only 28-30 units (pumping) eating moderate amounts of carbs (150-170g daily).

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    19. Donna Clemons

      No

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    20. Wanacure

      Metformin is touted for other reasons, like restoring sleep cycle for non-diabetics. From comments here, some T1D have benefitted. Others, no benefit. Makes me curious. I doubt I’ll ever have to stop taking insulin. I accepted this long ago. I’m grateful for this community. I’m grateful for learning that diabetes, like cancer, has many varieties. I’m very grateful for China’s early research into adult stem cell transplantation. Finally, the US is catching up on stem cell research and MRNA. I’m ready to be experimented upon!

      4 years ago Log in to Reply

    Do you currently take medication to reduce insulin resistance (e.g., metformin, thiazolidinediones)? If so, when did you start the medication? Cancel reply

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