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    • 2 hours, 41 minutes ago
      Daniel Bestvater likes your comment at
      When you change your insulin pump site, do you tend to notice a spike in your blood glucose levels afterward?
      There are certain areas on my body where the insulin is more effective than others.
    • 12 hours, 14 minutes ago
      Lee Tincher likes your comment at
      When you change your insulin pump site, do you tend to notice a spike in your blood glucose levels afterward?
      I oftentimes give myself a little insulin for when I go unplugged while changing pods, depending on what my current sensor reading is.
    • 12 hours, 15 minutes ago
      Lee Tincher likes your comment at
      When you change your insulin pump site, do you tend to notice a spike in your blood glucose levels afterward?
      Always, until I began to increase the "cannula fill" amount. I found I need a good bit more than the (1.3u) to "prime the site" to have the next blood sugars be in goal. Just remember "every body is different". Darn than OmniPod does not let you change that amount, have to use "fake carbs". Something to consider.....
    • 12 hours, 15 minutes ago
      KarenM6 likes your comment at
      How well do you understand the details of your health insurance coverage?
      They change all the time. Generally not in a direction to improve my health, but to increase the money in their wallet.
    • 12 hours, 15 minutes ago
      Lee Tincher likes your comment at
      When you change your insulin pump site, do you tend to notice a spike in your blood glucose levels afterward?
      Sometimes, which makes sense to me. It seems like it takes a while til the new insulin is absorbed.
    • 16 hours, 30 minutes ago
      KSannie likes your comment at
      When you change your insulin pump site, do you tend to notice a spike in your blood glucose levels afterward?
      **cannula
    • 22 hours, 48 minutes ago
      Kathleen Juzenas likes your comment at
      If you use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), where do you prefer to view your CGM readings?
      I find a using the T-Connect app I have the main features needed, CMG, bolus, battery level and remaining insulin.
    • 1 day, 2 hours ago
      TEH likes your comment at
      When you change your insulin pump site, do you tend to notice a spike in your blood glucose levels afterward?
      Sometimes, which makes sense to me. It seems like it takes a while til the new insulin is absorbed.
    • 1 day, 2 hours ago
      atr likes your comment at
      When you change your insulin pump site, do you tend to notice a spike in your blood glucose levels afterward?
      Usually the opposite. Fresh insulin sometimes sends me low.
    • 1 day, 3 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      If you use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), where do you prefer to view your CGM readings?
      Mostly pump because I want to quickly see insulin on board. Tandem on IPhone when holding my great-niece while she sleeps since getting my pump out of my pocket always wakes her ☺️. Dexcom app if not in need of insulin.
    • 1 day, 3 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      If you use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), where do you prefer to view your CGM readings?
      usually the pump; sometimes my phone.
    • 1 day, 3 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      If you use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), where do you prefer to view your CGM readings?
      My pump (Tandem X2). Since I have to carry a work phone close to 247, I don't want to deal with two phones (device overload!). As I go about my day, looking at my pump meets my needs, I can decide to bolus etc - and edit the bolus. For more in depth data review and analysis, I use the TConnect.
    • 1 day, 3 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      If you use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), where do you prefer to view your CGM readings?
      I read it from my pump.
    • 1 day, 3 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      If you use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), where do you prefer to view your CGM readings?
      On my insulin pump
    • 1 day, 3 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      If you use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), where do you prefer to view your CGM readings?
      My pump. Keep it simple.
    • 1 day, 3 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      How well do you understand the details of your health insurance coverage?
      How much of this is intentionally misleading? My mail order prescription service says that can’t possibly know the cost of a medication until after it’s been shipped, which is too late to cancel or return, of course, and makes it impossible to comparison shop.
    • 1 day, 3 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      How well do you understand the details of your health insurance coverage?
      I have an MA in writing and lit, but gobbledegook is gobbledegook. The fancy term is obscurantism.
    • 1 day, 3 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      How well do you understand the details of your health insurance coverage?
      They change all the time. Generally not in a direction to improve my health, but to increase the money in their wallet.
    • 1 day, 3 hours ago
      Lawrence S. likes your comment at
      When you change your insulin pump site, do you tend to notice a spike in your blood glucose levels afterward?
      Usually the opposite. Fresh insulin sometimes sends me low.
    • 2 days ago
      Sarah Berry likes your comment at
      If you use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), where do you prefer to view your CGM readings?
      My pump
    • 2 days, 1 hour ago
      Marty likes your comment at
      If you use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), where do you prefer to view your CGM readings?
      One nice thing about a watch for readings is that, while it is normally redundant, you can be separated from your phone. For example, when you are in water.
    • 2 days, 1 hour ago
      Marty likes your comment at
      If you use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), where do you prefer to view your CGM readings?
      I use both as you can’t do everything you want in one or the other
    • 2 days, 2 hours ago
      Kathy Hanavan likes your comment at
      If you use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), where do you prefer to view your CGM readings?
      I selected “other” because my preference (smart watch, mobile phone, or pump screen) depends on circumstances. Watch for a quick and discrete view; pump if I’m preparing for a profile or activity adjustment or bolus, mobile phone if just a food bolus.
    • 2 days, 2 hours ago
      John Barbuto likes your comment at
      If you use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), where do you prefer to view your CGM readings?
      I use both as you can’t do everything you want in one or the other
    • 2 days, 3 hours ago
      Gerald Oefelein likes your comment at
      If you use a continuous glucose monitor (CGM), where do you prefer to view your CGM readings?
      I use both as you can’t do everything you want in one or the other
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    Where do you most often go to get your routine bloodwork done?

    Home > LC Polls > Where do you most often go to get your routine bloodwork done?
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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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    " At T1D Exchange, we’re proud to announce our Medical and Research Advisory Team — an accomplished group of leaders in endocrinology, research, and quality improvement. Together, they are redefining what’s possible in type 1 diabetes (T1D) care through rigorous data analysis, innovative research approaches, and real-world implementation. Their collective expertise is central to our mission of improving outcomes for all people living with T1D.  “We’re excited to be working with our advisors given their deep expertise across a broad range of areas in T1D,” said Dave Walton, CEO of T1D Exchange. “Their involvement magnifies our reach, knowledge, and impact. These advisors are shaping the future of diabetes care — driving innovation across research, clinical practice, and quality improvement.”    Meet the Medical & Research Advisory Team  The T1D Exchange Medical and Research Advisory Team brings together four leading endocrinologists, each offering a unique perspective and shared commitment to advancing T1D care:    Jenise Wong, MD, PhD Pediatric endocrinologist at UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital and Professor of Pediatrics in the Division of Endocrinology at the University of California, San Francisco Focus areas: Diabetes technology adoption and usability; health equity and access to care and technology; community-based and peer-support interventions; culturally responsive care          Jennifer Sherr, MD, PhD Pediatric endocrinologist at Yale Medicine and Professor of Pediatrics in the Division of Endocrinology at Yale School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut Focus areas: Clinical trials in diabetes technology (CGM and AID systems), disease-modifying treatments and immunotherapies, and emerging technologies and medications, including continuous ketone monitoring and nasal glucagon     Viral Shah, MD Adult endocrinologist at Indiana University Health and Professor of Medicine in the Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism at Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, Indiana Focus areas: Diabetes technology and adjunctive therapy trials; translational and data-driven research; T1D complications and bone health         Nestoras Mathioudakis, MD, MHS Adult endocrinologist at Johns Hopkins Medicine and Associate Professor of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland Focus areas: AI-driven clinical support tools; EMR-based data analytics for clinical decision making; data-driven quality improvement; health equity in T1D care        This accomplished team’s expertise spans adult and pediatric endocrinology, research, and quality improvement affiliated with leading institutions nationwide. Collectively, they have authored over 500 diabetes publications and secured research funding from organizations such as the National Institutes of Health, Helmsley Charitable Trust, the American Diabetes Association, and Breakthrough T1D — while remaining actively engaged in both clinical care and research.  “These individuals represent an impressive body of work while remaining deeply involved in the day-to-day realities of diabetes care,” said Walton. Their expertise covers the full spectrum of T1D care — from AI and predictive analytics to complication prevention, automated insulin delivery, continuous glucose and ketone monitoring, GLP-1 treatments, health equity, mental health, autoantibody screening, and disease prevention.    Turning insight into impact  The team’s work goes beyond research, focusing on translating insights into real-world practice. By leveraging data to scale best practices, the goal is to drive meaningful, measurable change across clinics and communities.  “Our advisors will help to extend our impact — whether through QI strategy, research innovation, funding opportunities, or new data-driven solutions,” said Walton. “We want to take what’s working at individual centers and spread that as broadly as possible.”   He added, “As a Collaborative, we’re also focused on advanced population health strategies such as exploring predictive data models to identify risks earlier and intervene before complications even begin to happen.”    The power of the T1D Exchange Quality Improvement Collaborative  Central to this work is the T1D Exchange Quality Improvement Collaborative (T1DX-QI) — a nationwide network of clinics working together to improve care through shared data, benchmarking, and evidence-based practices.  “I’m thrilled to serve as a Medical Advisor for T1D Exchange, because I’ve seen firsthand the impact this network can have on patient care,” said Dr. Nestoras Mathioudakis. “T1D Exchange is the premier organization for quality improvement in type 1 diabetes, with unparalleled assets like a large EHR database and robust patient registry.”  He added that he is excited to apply his expertise in EHR research and big data analytics to generate real-world evidence across diagnosis, management, and outcomes.  Dr. Viral Shah echoed that perspective, reflecting on T1DX-QI's evolution: “I have been involved with T1D Exchange since its early days and have had the privilege of witnessing how it has transformed the quality of diabetes care across the United States. I’m delighted to return as a Medical Advisor.”  He emphasized the importance of accelerating impact. “I look forward to working closely with the team to accelerate the evidence generation and to help translate these insights to improve patient care.”   Dr. Jenise Wong highlighted the visible impact of T1DX-QI on the delivery of care. "I’m truly honored and grateful to be working with T1D Exchange as a Medical Advisor. T1DX-QI is a remarkable resource for centers that are using continuous process improvement to improve the quality of care for people living with diabetes.”  “Diabetes centers working with T1DX –QI have done amazing work using QI methodology to make care accessible and equitable for all people with diabetes,” she said. “It’s inspiring to be a part of a collaborative in which centers have been creative and thoughtful with initiatives to address individual and systemic challenges to care, improving clinical outcomes as well as the patient experience."  Looking ahead, Dr. Sherr highlighted the opportunity to build on the existing strong foundation. “I’m very excited to be working as a Medical Advisor for T1D Exchange,” she said. “It’s a privilege to help shape what comes next for a group that’s already doing such impactful work.”  “Sharing what’s happening in clinical practice, benchmarking across centers, and understanding outcomes is how we figure out what’s working, what’s not, and where we go next,” she said.      The future of T1D care   With this team’s vision and expertise, T1D Exchange is positioned to accelerate progress in T1D care — bridging research and real-world practice to drive meaningful, measurable impact.  Together, we look forward to advancing innovation and improving outcomes for everyone affected by type 1 diabetes.   "

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    29 Comments

    1. Chris Albright

      CPL lab

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    2. Mick Martin

      My local hospital. My blood is normally extracted by a nurse at my diabetes clinic and sent off to the hospital’s pathology department.

      Other tests are normally carried out at my local hospital pathology department.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    3. LizB

      My insurance allows me to use Quest or LabCorp. They do not draw blood for labs at the hospital where my endo is although they have their own lab on site, but that would be a separate visit and not covered by insurance. My PCP will draw blood and send it out to Quest so it’s nice that I save time there.

      1
      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    4. Retired and glad

      My A1C is done in the endo’s office by his nurse, while lipid and other testing is done at a lab in the hospital/clinic.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    5. connie ker

      I don’t mind waiting my turn at out patient labs provided by our local hospital in a seperate building. However, when having fasting labs, I want to get it over with fast so I can get home to take short acting insulin and eat breakfast. This past January, I left home in 9 degrees temps, dark outside and showed up for labs at 6:15am. Sugars were going up and when I got home it was still dark and cold outside. I drive alone and am getting concerned about fasting labs which I detest.

      4
      4 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Lorri McLuckie

        Agree!

        4 years ago Log in to Reply
      2. Wanacure

        I used to incovenience myself to get fasting blood samples and urine tests by lab at clinic. After giving bodily floods to lab tech, I would stay at clinic waiting room to immediately take morning shot and eat a breakfast I had packed. After years of this a doctor told me fasting was irrelevant to test results for HbA1c, platelet count, lipids, protein in urine, etc.

        4 years ago Log in to Reply
    6. Hieromonk Alexis

      I’m in a supportive living facility to which a hematologist from a local lab comes in each week.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    7. Kathleen Begbie

      It depends. Endo – offsite lab. Primary Care – on site lab

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    8. Marty

      I was due for bloodwork at a lab in my healthcare network in December but they were scheduling 10 days out at the time a I called for an appointment due to staff shortages. They’d also closed the lab nearest me to anyone but the OB/GYN patients who see their doctors there. Since I wouldn’t get the results before my next doctor appt, I skipped it. I’ll have to find a new place when I try again in the spring.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    9. Lynn Smith

      Okay, I’m spoiled. Inside my endo’s office, Quest has a room dedicated to only them. So, that’s where I get my blood drawn every 3 months before my endo appointment. Then, 2 days later I get an email saying my results are ready and I log on to the Quest website and see all my numbers. Then I receive another email after my insurance has paid and then I can look at the bill and pay online. I love Quest.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    10. Marilyn Levitt

      I arrange an appointment with a nurse from in home blood test services company. This is very convenient and the cost is reasonable.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    11. Tom Caesar

      Lab Corp is my preferred visit. They’re nearby, allowing walk ins and appointments both, pleasant professional staff. They email me results promptly.
      Have had good luck using them.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    12. Sherrie Johnson

      Local hospital lab not associated with my Endocrinologist , who is independent, but rather my primary. This way I have all records on file for the wholevUC Davis system

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    13. Kristine Warmecke

      Since 2020 my endocrinologist and I decided that unless I’m having an in person appointment with her, my routine lab work for T1D is done with my port draw at the cancer center. Saves travel times for me.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    14. Kim Murphy

      I use a satellite lab of Providence hospital, located not too far from my doctors office. I remember the good old days where I got to do the lab draws at the doctor’s office, but they don’t do that anymore. Now you have to go to a place and wait for a long time in a line.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    15. TEH

      I was getti g my blood work done at my Endo’s office. That is a 60 mile round trip. So I get blood taken and I get a call or email with results. For the last 6 months I have been going to the local hospital that’s 10 miles round trip. The problem is they are slow and my Endondoesent always get the results in time.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    16. Antsy

      Our in-network hospital(s) have on-campus LabCorp labs. I sometimes get bloodwork & other tests done at my PCP’s office, but even though they also use LabCorp, it takes 7-14 times longer to get results than it does from the outpatient labs at the hospitals.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    17. Sherolyn Newell

      Blood draw is at endo’s office. I don’t know where they send it. Results are fast.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    18. Janis Senungetuk

      I go to a lab ln one of the HMO clinics. The tests are run at the associated hospital and results posted on MyChart patient portal within the same day or next. I make every effort to have the lab results available just before my scheduled endo appointments so we can discuss the results at the appointment. In the past, before I was covered under my spouse’s employer benefits, I relied on a variety of at home labs that I purchased on-line.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
      1. Mig Vascos

        I call my doctor’s office ahead of time and ask to send an order to The local Quest. Most of my diabetes care appointments are telehealth so is easier this way.

        4 years ago Log in to Reply
    19. Kathy Morison

      I usually go to a local hospital’s outpatient lab

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    20. Becky Hertz

      I’m with Kaiser, there are two clinics/labs near me.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    21. Christina Trudo

      For almost everything, a lab affiliated with the hospital where I see 90% of my docs. There are several conveniently located labs at neighborhood based practices of that hospital. I did start seeing a thyroid specialist at another hospital for my thyroid when I had some unusual results. Long story short, I have those drawn at her hospital or satellite site, but because the normal testing process no longer yields accurate results for me (something with antibodies?) the blood is sent to a Reference Lab… in the case of that hospital, they contract with the Mayo Clinic’s lab for that test. As I understand it there are some tests which are performed only or primarily/most reliably at such labs. (There is another large reference lab at the Cleveland Clinic for example. )

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    22. mbulzomi@optonline.net

      At my Endos. office and Quest for my Primary blood work.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    23. Steve Rumble

      I’m a member of Kaiser Permanente HMO which provides access to labs, radiology, etc. on site.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    24. Wanacure

      I’m also w/ KP. Samples taken by lab tech are sent to some central lab somewhere else. I get results online in just a day or two. Online I can compare results of each test from year to year. The results also tell me what limits are for abnormally high or low and what the test is about. In addition I can ask the doctor online if I have questions. Or, if something is abnormal, he’ll take the initiative to alert me.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    25. Annie Simon

      At hospital next to my endocrinologist’s office as he can access it directly online. I have blood test done every 3-4 months when visiting my endocrinologist

      4 years ago Log in to Reply
    26. Laurie Tomer

      At a lab in the hospital in my town. Not at my dr’s office or dr’s hospital because it is farther away from my home.

      4 years ago Log in to Reply

    Where do you most often go to get your routine bloodwork done? Cancel reply

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