16 posts, 9 contributors
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Alan 49
DAFNE Graduate
Maidstone & Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust 284 posts |
I'd like to get one of these when they become available: |
Muna A H
DAFNE Graduate
Royal North Shore Hospital, St Leonards, NSW 34 posts |
I searched this product. Seemed amazing. I hope it will be available in Australia soon |
CurlyWurly
DAFNE Graduate
NHS Lanarkshire 15 posts |
I seen this on the diabetes.co.uk forum - looks great and I would love it. The chances of the NHS funding it instead of strips though is pretty low for now I would imagine. It seems the sensors only last 2 weeks and cost approx. £48 each. Free strips but finger pricks Vs. £100 a month. |
Gareth H
DAFNE Graduate
Maidstone & Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust 12 posts |
that looks great but very similar to the ipro2 thing they put on you for 7 day monitoring...while i found that very helpful i also found it annoyingly uncomfortable after a few days! |
SimonC
DAFNE Graduate
NHS Harrow 78 posts |
This does look quite good - a sort of half way house between CGM and pricking - I would like to try it out, as pricking is a pain (no real pun here as it doesn't hurt me), but I suspect that the NHS will be slow to adopt. I see that someone is giving a cost of approx £48 per sensor, I suspect the this will drop if other companies come out with rival systems. Approx £100 per month may seem a bit high, but the strips and lancets for the finger pricking also cost the NHS - the companies love to give out the monitors free as then they will make a lot of money from GP's prescribing the strips, and if, as in Type 1 you need to do quite a lot of testing, then this can add up - I did a very quick and rough estimation. |
wigworld
DAFNE Graduate
Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust 19 posts |
I saw that price of £48 per sensor somewhere, but it wasn't clear if that was the retail price or trade price. The NHS pay trade price, so I guess around £30 a fortnight. I test 5 or 6 times a day at the moment, which costs the NHS around £45-£50 a month. The sensors would cost the NHS around £60 a month. (If £48 per sensor is the trade price, however, that increases, obviously). The NHS would also save on the cost of lancets (though they're not expensive). |
stephenbrowne
DAFNE Graduate
University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust 37 posts |
I saw an advert for this system on the back of Balance magazine. I'm on an insulin pump and find I need to do about 10 tests a day so I was very inteerested. Two things put me off : the price, and the fact that if measues interstitial fluid sugar rather than blood sugar so is 15 minutes behind the true blood sugar. Nevertheless only needing to change it every 14 days is an advantage and it is easy to see trends. |
wigworld
DAFNE Graduate
Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust 19 posts |
The 15 minutes lag time is a fair point, but how often is that really an issue for most people? In terms of accuracy, they claim that the variation from blood glucose is around 10%, and that's better than the variation between different brands of BG test strips. |
marke
Site Administrator
South East Kent PCT 681 posts |
All, I hope to be able to give you all details of this device next week. My consultant has set me up with a trial and I'm meeting someone to have it fitted. I too asked about the sensors on the NHS and was told no but we shall see !! If nothing else it will hopefully give me a more detailed BG trend. Since normal BG readings are only an approximation anyway I am not too worried that it doesn't measure blood directly. |
wigworld
DAFNE Graduate
Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust 19 posts |
Thanks, Marke, I look forward to hearing your feedback. I'm seriously considering getting one, even if I have to pay for the sensors myself. |