Joseludi said:
and I go out again to defend the free ...
Hearing you it seems that it is shit ... and it is if you have inadvertent hypos and you need the alarm
I do not have inadvertent hypos, I can have enough with what the free gives me
And with what I save with respect to Dexcom I allow myself to buy other things.
I am perfectly since I have been free since it came out about two years ago.I have not had differences of 40 or 50 as some here you dare to generalize ...
... As I do not generalize that all those who use free are going from P.M., but also a lot of people are doing great.
Regarding the polemic dog-dexcom, I agree that a dog can never fully replace Dexcom.The dog will be circumstances and places where it cannot be used.
And to calm the pro-dexcom I am sure that there is no product that in quality-price relationship is more reliable for those who have inadvertent hypos.
And no, no, I'm not a commercial Abbot (as soon as I better change myself)
Joseludi ... My message does not go against the "free", as you say, there will be people who do great, more, there will be people who with the strips, they go great (and save what the free costs for others costs for othersthings).
The controversy of my previous message is that the fact of giving it some advertising lines to talk about the "dogs" seems very sad, and on top of that, it is not used to ask ...
The message would have to be, I insist "look at the circus we mounted" to have our controlled children ... SS Finanians, Finishing the Dexcom, "Animas" finishes ... but no ... it seems the solution.
They should in the same article put other brothers in the same situation using a continuous meter (an Abbott Navigator II for example, we forget Dexcom), and explain how their day to day is ... Then reality would come to light.Of course, I can not value economically, everyone knows their life and adapts to resources, but this has to be a complaint, not a solution, which is what it seems.
All these devices should be financed by the SS ... that you want the free, because perfect! Maybe if they let you choose, you stay with an animas pump with Dexcom sensor, or a dexcom or an Abbott Navigator II.
I insist, it is no longer about different devices ... It is about what is to be seen that is essential.Dogs, parrots, agapornis ... are very good, but always last resort, and here, of course, they are not (for example, for a blind man, a lazarillo dog can be the option, or that social security pays himA 24 -hour assistant that would be ideal, and I see that complicated, then dog, last resort)
Greetings