Showing posts with label CGM access. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CGM access. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

A Decade of Progress

A Decade of Progress


My mid- and late thirties were a turbulent time, but nothing from that period quite matches the moment I noticed a small black dot as I travelled to London for work. I thought I’d glanced at the sun, or a bright light, and that the dot would vanish. I was very wrong.

In today’s blog post, I’m going to look back over the last decade of living with T1D and my HbA1c history — but first, what happened to push me into taking things seriously.


No Longer My Diabetes Salad Days

When the black dot appeared, I was already more than 25 years into life with T1D. Twenty-five years without any problems. Invincible.

My “salad days” with T1D were long gone and life was treating me kindly. I had the house, the car, a senior job in London, and all the trappings, and vices, a young man might do better to avoid.


The Dot That Never Went Away

While life was “colourful” and busy, the dot remained. It moved around, that’s what blood does in the fluid of your eye. Sometimes it would disappear from my vision entirely, and for a brief moment I thought everything was fine again.

Of course, it always came back.

Six months passed and it brought some friends to the party: more black dots. They’d even moved in next door, floating around in both eyes. Naturally, I did what many frightened men do and put my head firmly in the sand.


Wakey Wakey

In the UK, during winter, when you wake up it’s dark - you’ve probably noticed that. However, if you wake up with eyes full of blood in the UK (or anywhere), in winter (or at any time of year), it’s extremely dark.

That morning, I finally decided enough was enough and went to the emergency eye clinic. During the journey to what must be the world’s hottest clinic, I resigned myself to whatever was coming. Maybe, just maybe, they could fix me and I’d go home with perfect vision.

I did go home. My vision was unchanged, and emergency surgery was booked for a few weeks later.

The words of the man who would soon become my surgeon and sight-saver cut through me like a hot knife through butter:

"I’m going to see a lot of you."

When a consultant eye surgeon says that, it’s never good news.

After several surgeries, pain from off-the-scale hypertension, and significant visual impairment - issues that still affect me today - they’d patched me up enough for me to function again.


Eyes Wide Open

I’ve written about my eye complications many times, so I won’t bore you with the full story again. Feel free to explore the blog if you want the gory details.

The experience truly opened my eyes to the dangers of T1D. My 40th birthday was on the horizon, and taking this seriously was long overdue.

30 Years a T1D

My three-decade diabetes anniversary coincided with a primary care diabetes review. Eventually, I allowed the HbA1c test. Three days later, my GP called.

My HbA1c was 8.9%.

If you don’t work in percentages, trust me, 8.9% is high. Borderline very high.

I thought I was looking after myself. I was doing better, but only just. I was finger-pricking a little more often, rather than once or twice a week. That might sound minimal, but even that slight improvement showed up in my HbA1c.

I remember it being higher in the past, possibly as high as 10% when I was a child.

My surgeon’s words echoed in my mind. The risk of total blindness was very real.


40 Laps of the Sun

It probably wasn’t the exact moment I turned 40, but somewhere around that time I decided to truly get to grips with this condition. A GP friend told me he’d noticed how common that age is for men to start taking their health seriously.

Urgh. I hate being part of the crowd.

Still, taking it seriously began. Carbs counted. Pre-bolus dialled in. Eight to ten finger pricks a day. I was micromanaging the sh*t out of it.

My next HbA1c?

7%.


Fights for Progression

I hovered around 7% for a while. Then I moved into the high 6s, then mid, then low - eventually bottoming out at 5.9%, a pre-diabetic HbA1c, over the course of the last decade.

Taking T1D seriously is hard. Using basic tools and medication will only take you so far. For some, that’s far enough, and you’re smashing it.

For me, I was burning out.

Disappointingly, my requests for a CGM, and later a pump, were initially declined. After going through the hell of eye complications, “no” was never going to be the end of those conversations.

By then, I’d started Diabetic Dad UK on Twitter, back in the golden days of social media. The friends and connections I made there gave me invaluable guidance (and access) to the technology I needed.

After countless meetings, calls, emails, and a few thinly veiled threats (kidding… mostly), I finally got what I needed to manage my diabetes effectively and still have the headspace to live my life.


The T1D Tech

Many of you reading this will already be using some form of diabetes tech, probably a CGM at the very least. In England, we have some strong voices to thank for that.

Sooner or later, hybrid closed-loop systems will be the standard for people with T1D. That technology has given me my best HbA1c results yet and reduced the risk of further complications later in life.


The Long Game

T1D is lifelong. Let’s forget cure stories for a moment. If you get the diagnosis, you’re in it for the long run - the forever run.

It’s never too late to grab this condition by the throat and stand up to it. It’s a bully, trying to kill or maim you.

And when you stand up to bullies, you shrink them. You make them smaller and less significant.

Just like your future HbA1c results.


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Thursday, November 25, 2021

The Diabetes Technology Revolution


Welcome, Comrades. It's another blog about Diabetes tech because you haven't been inundated with news of it through your socials. Of course you have and it's been fantastic news! If you've missed it, in short, T1Ds in England and Wales are set to be given NHS funding for CGMs and some T2Ds (on insulin) are set to be offered NHS funding for a Flash Glucose Monitor.

The gates aren't being kicked down just yet. The above seems likely to go through in the March of 2022 because the behemoth that is the NHS and NICE aren't exactly agile in directional changes. Cool, fine, okay. 

The news doesn't really impact upon me. I'm one of those lucky social media types who are offered CGMs in return for reviewing and talking about functionality. I'm delighted for my peers, especially those who don't get along with Libre because of accuracy issues, adhesives, etc. I do hope that the CGMs on offer are varied, however. Having used several in the last 4 - 5 years and having spoken to probably thousands of other users, it seems apparent that different systems work better for some than others. I don't know why that might be but I've certainly noticed some monitors aren't within my personal parameters of acceptable accuracy and comfort. Recently, how environmentally friendly these devices are have become more of an issue - I've been talking about that since the summer of 2020 so, that's nice to see and it will be fascinating to watch how the different companies react.

Type 2 Comrades on insulin, how happy are you? I really hope that this news is the start of a more level playing field for you guys and you're offered equal respect and reduced stigma because of this and future developments. 

Are we really now heading into a full on Diabetes tech revolution? I saw Libre as the first step on that ladder when I first began using it, despite it's questionable accuracy, a few years ago. And now we're here - on the verge of total CGM access, no need to be under 18 or pregnant or both. Looping trials are seemingly progressing well. Type 2s are now at the party. Perhaps there'll be a cure in 5 years!? Hahaha. Sorry.  I think we are and we're right in the middle of it. The drivers of change must be thanked for that because even if this is as far as it goes for the next 10 years it will be a huge advancement in care and undoubtedly improvement in the long term outcomes for Diabetics.

Vive la révolution!

Where next? You've read this far without me mentioning NICE pump therapy criteria. But! budgets, tax payers! but there are people who need it more than others! but this, that and the other. I'm done with buts. If I wanted buts I'd be a colorectal doctor. Where there is a problem, there is a solution. If the problem is money then the solution is to obtain more or reduce spending to balance the books. But where from!? - Read the above about "buts". I'm happy to work on that solution for a very reasonable salary. If the problem is the current NICE criteria, and it REALLY is, then revise it. Just today, I've been told of others who have purposefully let their blood glucose run high to obtain pump funding because of the NICE criteria. Let that sink in. I know that I've briefly spoken about this before but now others are openly approaching me to tell me of such occurrences. That's self harm. In the short term, you risk DKA and possibly death. In the long term, you increase your risk of Diabetes related complications. Self harm and risking awful health problems to obtain something which should reduce those horrible things happening in the first place. 

So, today I'm calling for the scrapping and revision of the NICE criteria for NHS pump funding. It is not fit for purpose. Not only is it unfair and far too stringent, it is resulting in real harm in the real world and that is shameful.

 Thank you so much for reading this blog. I do appreciate your visit and your support. As you might know, I LOVE COFFEE! So I've teamed up with a thing called Buy Me A Coffee. If you enjoy my content and appreciate the time it takes to create such things then you can buy me a coffee! If you leave your Twitter @ name when you buy me a coffee, I will personally thank you. If you'd rather be anonymous then that's totally cool. Thanks for the caffeine!