Hacker Timesnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

It's smaller than the phone you already carry around. It's mathmatically and demonstrably superior to shots. They have integrated CGMs now. Ask around, the folks with the fastest paced lives (diabetic Olympians, marathoners, world travelers, etc) ALL have pumps.

Unless you have a 6% HA1C on shots, get a pump and live decades longer.



My wife is Type 1, and was on the pump but went off of it after about a year. Says she feels in more control without it, and that it gave her a false sense of "security." And she has had better results since, and more stable sugars.

I don't know, obviously, not being diabetic myself, but I will say she went on the pump really soon after being diagnosed and didn't really have a chance to establish a routine first, and that probably played a large part in her doing better on shots right now. I've been encouraging her to start thinking about using the pump again, as I do feel that, used correctly, as I believe it is a better method, but she has to do what she feels works best for her.

Being a developer myself, the idea that she has to use a custom cable and custom software to manage the data she has in her meter drives me a bit nuts. But the meter industry is, IMO, full of companies that don't really want to help users, they just want to get rich off of diabetics. I know thats a bit cynical, and I'm sure there are companies that sincerely care as well, but it's how I often feel about the meter industry.


Will back up Scott here -- while not an olympian, I rowed for 4 years on the pump and have biked x-country w/ it.

I seriously doubt if I would've been up to doing either while managing injections instead of button presses.


Thanks everybody, I'll talk with my doctor tomorrow when I have an appointment.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: