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    • 31 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.
    • 49 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.
    • 50 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!
    • 1 hour, 42 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!
    • 1 hour, 57 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!
    • 22 hours, 39 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
    • 23 hours, 39 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.
    • 23 hours, 42 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.
    • 23 hours, 42 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.
    • 23 hours, 43 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.
    • 1 day 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 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, 1 hour 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, 4 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, 9 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, 9 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, 9 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, 9 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, 9 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, 10 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, 10 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, 12 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, 18 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, 20 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, 20 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.
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    Does your T1D healthcare provider suggest new medications or devices that they think would be beneficial to your T1D management during your appointments?

    Home > LC Polls > Does your T1D healthcare provider suggest new medications or devices that they think would be beneficial to your T1D management during your appointments?
    Previous

    If you have never used an insulin pump with automated insulin delivery (also known as a hybrid closed-loop pump), what are some of the reasons you're reluctant, or obstacles you’ve encountered? Please select all that apply.

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    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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    34 Comments

    1. Ernie Richmann

      I may already be on the best medications and devices available to me.

      3
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    2. Mick Martin

      I wouldn’t say that my T1D healthcare provider OFTEN suggests medications or devices that they think would be beneficial to my diabetes management, but they do SOMETIMES suggest options available to me. (I was privileged to be the first person, in the area that I live, to be offered CSII (Continuous Subcutaneous Insulin Infusion, or pump technology) to help control my diabetes. This was after my endocrinologist attended a diabetes conference in the United States where a former Miss America, Nicole Johnson, was demonstrating a Medtronic/MiniMed insulin pump. He asked her for more information on how these pumps work, mentioning that I had extreme difficulty in controlling my diabetes, with me spending as much time in hospital as I was at home when I was taking multiple daily injections (MDI). On his return to the UK, he offered me the opportunity to ‘trial’ the pump, which I accepted. This was in 1989.)

      6
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    3. Marty

      I think my healthcare providers learn about new medications and devices at about the same time that I do. This wasn’t the case when I was first diagnosed, pre-internet. Back then, I always looked forward to seeing my CDE because I knew I’d come away with something to make my life easier/better.

      3
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    4. Annie Wall

      I had to answer “other” because I just got a new endo after my other one retired so I’ve only met with him once. Too early to discuss new technology or medications.

      1
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    5. Lawrence S.

      Generally, no, my healthcare provider does not suggest new medications or devices. However, it is not often that new meds/devices become available. Most things are dependent upon my quarterly blood tests. Recently, my Endo put me on statin drugs when my bloodwork showed high cholesterol over a six month period. Otherwise, I am usually the one who asks about new devices about which I have heard or read.

      1
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    6. TomH

      I’m almost always more informed of the reported advancements in T1 treatments than my doc. So I usually bounce ideas off the doc for his input.

      2
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    7. Elizabeth Jones

      I am on the Dexcom, I’m not on a pump though. I am LADA so I have very high insulin resistance, so I use a lot of insulin & there’s just not a pump that would be efficient for my amount of insulin. I’ve tried to get Afrezza, but every Endoc I bring it up to won’t prescribe it. Even though I bring them evidence that it doesn’t cause lung cancer when you’re not a smoker. So frustrating that we can’t agree on that course of treatment.

      1
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Tom Caesar

        Sorry to hear of your difficulties getting affrenza, it’s a handy addition to treatment. Keep trying!

        1
        3 years ago Log in to Reply
    8. Kathleen Juzenas

      Yes, but I wouldn’t say often. They’ve made suggestions as I struggled to control my numbers: pumps, CGM, thyroid medication, Reclast for my bones. Medicare approves a new pump every 5 years, not very often. I’ve been stable for years and both doctor and I are satisfied, but I’m sure they’d make other recommendations if they saw the need.

      1
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    9. Jane Cerullo

      I am my own advocate. I read about new devices and always investigate side effects of any new medication before starting. I usually bring up but then have good discussion with Endo before making decisions.

      2
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    10. lis be

      not anymore, and I am happy about it! Most of the time they were recommending things that had been recently pitched to them by a pharmaceutical salesperson or a durable medical supplier. The doctors would give patients the “free samples” and it was often not the best fit, then after the “free” supply ran out, the prices were exorbitant. Maybe it still happens, but I haven’t seen it for a while.

      2
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    11. Bruce Schnitzler

      My provider indeed recommends new devices and treatments, but “often” is not correct. Only as they are available.

      1
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    12. Kris Sykes-David

      I have a new endo and have only seen her once for a long, introductory visit. So, not yet!

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    13. Joan Benedetto

      We usually initiate conversation about devices that we want to switch to or try.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    14. Tom Caesar

      Occasionally my Dr brings something new up, sometimes I do. Not often as I think I have the best devices/ treatment available. Had a endo once that was very slow to accept new treatments and I left him once I realized that.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    15. beth nelson

      The word “often” is pretty optimistic in what’s happening in the world of innovation and T1D. 🙂 But if there’s something new, one or the other of us will bring it up, as far as I know!!

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    16. Jian

      I done think there is anything I am not using already.
      My endo reviews everything at every visit and makes sure if I have any questions we discuss all. He is great.!

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    17. Ahh Life

      Yes. But then I self-selected when choosing an endocrinology clinic that pursues cutting-edge advances 40 years ago.

      Cutting-edge is a phrase that is also often called bleeding-edge because it is often experimental, hit or miss on results, and very expensive. I am convinced the “bleeding” refers to $$$.

      1
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    18. Janis Senungetuk

      With my endo, I usually have to ask. With the Diabetes Educator, she’ll make the suggestion first. They’re both very aware that I’m dependent on insurance covering the majority of the cost.

      1
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    19. George Lovelace

      When I first started with my current Endo we would discuss the released and upcoming products and I would tell her about the ‘off-market’ applications and devices, we both learned from each other. But she was so good with helping me transition to the Dexcom and then the Tandem after Animas was pulled from the Market. She followed my Dex and even finer tuned my Basals and early this year I got an “unbeleivable” 5.4 A1c and we are both extremely happy!

      1
      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    20. ConnieT1D62

      Sometimes … but it is usually only if I ask about a new device or medication, or there is an issue for something that isn’t covered in my health insurance formulary.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    21. Joan Fray

      Haven’t seen an end in years. Diabetes education does it all for me. Kaiser. I see her twice a year, otherwise email or phone. No big problems so far…..

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Joan Fray

        seen plenty of ends, but only one endo. Love spell checker!

        3 years ago Log in to Reply
    22. Molly Jones

      I chose other. My endo brings up new options depending on how they are viewed by her or the medical community.
      Control IQ was brought up as soon as it was available, before I was aware of it.
      I sometimes bring up new products, but they it is suggested to wait and see how they do.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    23. Steven Gill

      I see this doctor because he’s comfortable with my care: I’m the only TYPE 1 he sees (refers to a local hospital and follows up general care). He follows all my requests, but plan to enter the VA system will see what happens.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    24. Megan S

      I am informed about new tech as it is available or may be warranted to improve my care, but I don’t hear conversations about new medications. The only one I can remember is a change in the type of glucogon from the shot to the nasal spray, but nothing on the newer GLP-1 discussions or inhaled or such.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    25. T1DGJ

      I do not have a T1D designated healthcare provider. I am self-managed for 35 yrs, and I learn new things about T1 from online sources, such as the T1D Exchange and blogs by health-oriented T1s.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    26. Jennifer Edmiston

      I work with my healthcare provider with new technologies and medications that are available. I do research prior to my appointment and am prepared with questions

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    27. Jim Cobbe

      Personal beef: I answered ‘often’ but ‘occasionally’ would have been a far more accurate response. Why only a 3 point scale when you could have used a 5 point one easily?

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    28. mbulzomi@optonline.net

      Normally I get all the new information at my Group/Zoom meetings.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    29. Jneticdiabetic

      I put other since it’s not “often”. My original endo pushed for me to start a pump when they were still infrequently used due to my frequent lows. Thank you sir!. Sometimes my CDE gives me a heads up on new pump technology coming that night benefit me.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    30. Wanacure

      My endo keeps bugging me to eat more carbs or to lower my insulin doses to get higher than normal bg levels. She’d be happier if I were up to 148 mg/dL.

      3 years ago Log in to Reply
    31. Jeff Balbirnie

      Yup, and I laugh them out of the room almost instantly.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply
    32. Elisa Hopper

      My provider will discuss new devices with me, but we have not discussed new or different medications.

      2 years ago Log in to Reply

    Does your T1D healthcare provider suggest new medications or devices that they think would be beneficial to your T1D management during your appointments? Cancel reply

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