Insulin Pumps

Insulin Pumps (9)

Using Insulin Pumps in Diabetes: a guide for nurses and other health professionals

This book, published in 2008, is written primarily for UK health professionals, but it is also deliberately written in a jargon-free, straightforward style to make it understandable for anyone. It provides comprehensive information on pumps and pump use across a multitude of different situations. If you want to use pumps in your diabetes team, or if you are a pump user that wants to know more to help you in complex management situations, this book is for you.

Chapter by chapter, it provides:

  • What pump therapy is and national guidance on pump use.
  • The advantages and disadvantages of pump therapy.
  • Real-life experiences of pump users.
  • General insulin pump features and infusion sets.
  • How to set up an insulin pump service.
  • Assessing suitability for an insulin pump.
  • Matching insulin doses to carbohydrate intake.
  • Using an empowerment approach to pump education.
  • How to initiate pump therapy.
  • Setting and adjusting insulin pump doses.
  • Gaining good control of blood glucose levels.
  • Day-to-day aspects of living with a pump.
  • Using pumps for babies, children and teenagers.
  • Using pumps in pregnancy.
  • Complex management situations (illness, ketoacidosis, hospital admissions, renal failure, gastroparesis, cystic fibrosis).

Amazon review of Using Insulin Pumps in Diabetes', February 2009 by Dr Jeremy Fletcher (UK) :

"The title modestly proclaims it a guide for nurses and other HCPs, but I'm a diabetes consultant and, as someone new to insulin pump therapy, I learned a huge amount by reading it. The author takes the reader from an explanation of the physiological rationale for the insulin pump, through the practicalities of setting up a pump service, and patient selection, and on to detailed explanations of initiating and optimising therapy. The approach is very much UK-orientated (unlike much of the literature in this area, which has a US bias), and is up to date (with the sole exception of not incorporating the latest NICE guidance). I can heartily recommend this volume for any diabetes healthcare professional new to insulin pumping."

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Success with your Insulin Pump - A Successful Diabetes Handbook

This book, published in 2011, is written as a comprehensive reference for people with diabetes and those interested in pump therapy in the UK. If you need help to understand pump therapy and are nervous about getting started, or if you are still learning about your pump and want a straightforward reference guide to help you, this book is for you.

Chapter by chapter, it provides:

- An overview of what pump therapy is, with advantages and disadvantages, illustrated by both positive and negative quotes gathered from people using pumps.

- Getting your pump - where to start, details of what pre-pump assessments to expect, and other general preparation and planning.

- Getting started with your pump, including detailed information to help you calculate what insulin doses you will need.

- Early days with your pump, with many lifestyle aspects covered such as wearing your pump, dealing with psychological effects, infusion sites, and recording and using information from your pump.

- Highs and lows, providing help on how to deal with high and low blood glucose readings.

How to adjust your insulin doses and your ratios to deal with your day to day life, with real-life examples.

- Longer-term pump use, including ideas on how to experiment with your pump to get the best from it, and how to deal with specific situations including removing your pump, illness, alcohol, travel and physical activity.

- Frequently asked questions, covering many lifestyle issues that you may need the answer to.

Amazon review of 'Success with your Insulin Pump', February 2012, from Mrs O in the UK :

"I bought this book prior to starting on an insulin pump. It is written by an english author and I found the format much more to my liking than many of the american books.

It is simply written and easy to follow. It is not overly complicated and full of things that are not relevant when starting out.

I found some useful pointers and tips and am glad that I purchased it.

A lot of diabetes book authors could learn from this book, keep it simple. Starting on a pump has a huge information overload without adding much craziness to the equation.

Well recommended."

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Using Bolus Calculators

Bolus calculators are increasingly becoming a standard feature of insulin pumps. This means that some of the difficult mathematical calculations when using a pump become much easier. For example, if you take 1 unit of insulin for 10g of carbohydrate, and you are eating 30g of carbohydrate, it isn't too difficult to work out that you need 3 units of insulin to match. But if you take 1.2 units for every 10g of carbohydrate, and you are having 43g of carbohydrate, suddenly it becomes much more difficult. Rounding figures up and down slightly can work, but it is still very easy to make a mistake.

To use a bolus calculator, you first need to ensure that the pump has the correct information about your doses in its memory. This would include what your ratio of insulin to carbohydrate is (as discussed above), what range of blood glucose you are aiming for (with a highest and lowest value), and what your insulin correction ratio is, ie by how much 1 unit of insulin will lower your blood glucose level.

Once those values are stored, you also need to programme additional information in for the pump to be able to make individual calculations. The pump needs to know what your current blood glucose level is, and what (if anything) you are about to eat. In some cases, the information about your blood glucose level will be transferred automatically, if your pump has a wireless connection to your blood glucose meter or your continuous glucose monitoring system, but for many, this information will still need to be added manually. Depending on the type of pump, there may be other parameters that you can programme in, such as relating to physical activity.

The pump will then take account of all the information you have provided, and will suggest an insulin dose for you. It will not deliver the insulin automatically, as there may be reasons why you would not choose to follow the recommendations, so you need to agree to the dose before it will be delivered.

Bolus wizards have made it much easier for many people to use pumps safely. But there are some important aspects to consider. For example, whether you want your blood glucose level as low as you have programmed into your pump - if you are about to undertake physical activity for example, you may want to aim for a higher level, so will need to calculate how much to reduce the suggested dose by. If you are unwell, your insulin requirements may be much higher than usual, so the dose of insulin the pump has suggested may be much lower than you need. If you are unsure whether you will be eating the amount of carbohydrate you have in front of you, again you may need to have a smaller dose than the pump suggests. And if your meal contains a high proportion of fat or protein, the dose may need to be split or given over a longer period - your pump may or may not provide you with the option of calculating this for you. So when using your bolus wizard, keep in mind the circumstances when you may still need to add some of your own calculations!

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Children and Insulin Pumps

The guidance produced by the organisation NICE (see 'pump websites and support' page) gives greater support to insulin pump use in children than adults, in that it can be used for children under 12 years of age if multiple injection therapy 'is considered to be impractical or inappropriate' - thereby by-passing the need for a trial of multiple injections. However, it also states that in these circumstances, multiple injection therapy should be tried between the ages of 12 and 18.

It can be difficult to decide if your child should have an insulin pump, or, if you are a young person yourself, whether it is for you. Pumps have had great success when used with very young children, as insulin doses can be adjusted much more easily to deal with unpredictable eating patterns, and in teenagers, the hormone changes, rapid growth and sexual development that make diabetes difficult to control can be managed more successfully with such a flexible system. They have also been successful in children and young people who experience a lot of night-time hypos, and have reduced the large swings that some people regularly experience between high and low blood glucose levels.

In terms of lifestyle, pumps help children fit in much more easily with their peers. They find they are no longer singled out to 'go and have their medication' from the teacher's office, or having to go to a private room to do their injection - instead, they can meet their daytime insulin needs by simply programming their pump as they go. Eating away from home and dealing with variable and unpredictable physical activity also all become easier.

For children using a pump, there are many similarities with adult pump use, although setting basal rates and bolus amounts can require more attention, simply because of the smaller amounts of insulin involved. Whilst that is no different from managing childhood diabetes with injection therapy, in many cases it can be easier because of the very small doses that insulin pumps can provide - for example with some pumps, hourly basal rates can be set as low as 0.01 unit per hour.

What is important when using pumps in children and young people is that families work together, and that everyone concerned is clear about what the pump will mean and that they all agree it is the right course of action, rather than, for example, parents wanting a pump but their child being resistant to the idea.

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Providing an Insulin Pump Service

Despite NICE recommendations for pump use, which will include some people in every diabetes clinic across the UK, pump services are still patchy and lack uniformity. If you are less familiar with using pumps but wish to set up a service, there are many considerations, and the more planning you do, the easier it will be to set up the service in the way that you desire. These considerations are discussed here, and if you want more in-depth information, it can be found in our book 'Using Insulin Pumps in Diabetes'.

Firstly, deciding how your team want to approach pump therapy is important. This includes what your overall team philosophy is about using pumps (which can sometimes be difficult to agree on but helps to avoid inequality later on!), as well as what level of service will be provided by your team and when people will be referred to another service. Even if a minimal pump service is provided, clear lines of referral should be established.

Funding pathways are important and most usefully should be determined at the outset, although may change over time. Also how the service will be provided, which includes who will be involved, how people will be assessed, and how pump services will be integrated into existing services. This is particularly important if only some of the diabetes team staff deal with pumps, because those who are more experienced are, as they gain confidence, more likely to think of using a pump earlier than those who have less experience.

There are many other aspects of pump therapy that will need to be planned and agreed. These include ongoing support and access to emergency care for pump users, staff training, which pumps to use, how to provide objective information to your clinic population, what educational materials to use, what records to keep, and also, becoming more important in today's NHS, how to measure the success and effectiveness of your service. And across all of these, the thoughts, wishes and opinions of people with diabetes, both those using pumps and those not using pumps, should be sought to help you ensure your service meets their needs.

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Pump Websites and Support

There are many different websites available that can provide information, support and practical tips in a variety of ways. This section gives you some ideas on where to get started to find the type of information you need. Information about currently available pumps in the UK can be found through some of the websites below, where indicated.

Diabetes UK, the national charity for diabetes, has a very helpful insulin pump section with comprehensive information:

www.diabetes.org.uk/Guide-to-diabetes/Treatments/Insulin/Insulin-pumps/

There, you will find a short summary of what pump therapy is, answers to common questions, information about pump use in the UK, and details of the pumps currently available in the UK together with their manufacturers and website details. Diabetes UK also have a position statement on insulin pump therapy.

NICE, the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence, provides guidance to the NHS on the use of insulin pumps: Diabetes - insulin pump therapy (TA151)

http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/live/12014/41300/41300.pdf

Published in 2008, this guidance outlines the circumstances when insulin pumps should be provided by the NHS, based on disabling hypoglycaemia and ongoing uncontrolled blood glucose levels. Children under 12 can access pump therapy more easily - see the section on children and young people for more information.

INPUT, is a UK registered charity, set up and run by people with diabetes. It provides a vast amount of information on insulin pumps

www.inputdiabetes.org.uk

INPUT helps people in the UK have better access to pump therapy, so includes information on funding and what to do if you are having difficulty obtaining a pump. The website is also full of lots of other information, ranging from basic pump information to useful technologies like continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) and funding for this, plus access to sufficient testing strips. There are links to a huge range of other sources of information, including parliamentary debates, blogs, useful resources, apps and much more. The organisation's staff are pump users and make every effort to include any useful information they come across in relation to pump therapy and diabetes.

Insulin Pumpers UK, an independent organisation set up to help people with diabetes, and run by volunteers.

http://www.insulin-pumpers.org.uk/

Insulin Pumpers UK provides information about pumps, including lots of useful anecdotal stories from pump users themselves. The main focus of this organisation is to provide opportunities to enrol and have email discussions with others using pump therapy.

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Getting Started with a Pump

It's good to know the facts about anything new, and starting to use an insulin pump is no exception. The way that pump services are set up is very different from one diabetes team to another, so not everything here will apply in every case. This section takes you through the main things to expect.

Getting access to pump therapy

There is still variable access to pump therapy between different diabetes teams. In some teams, there will be very specific guidelines about the stage at which a pump should be considered. In others, it will be more subjective, and rely on your health professional's judgement. And in others still, pumps may only be used as a last resort and would be unlikely to be suggested as a routine treatment option. This variation is partly based on how experienced and confident different diabetes teams are in using pump therapy proactively, and partly on how local funding systems work. Whatever the case, if you are interested in using a pump, it is worth starting the conversation and seeing what the local situation is. You can also access information, help and ideas if you need them, particularly if you feel that you would benefit from using a pump but do not feel you are getting the local support and help you need.

Before getting your pump

You would be assessed to see how suitable pump therapy would be for you. Part of this is based on what is happening with your diabetes, for example if you have blood glucose levels that vary wildly and are extremely difficult to predict, or if you have low blood glucose levels with no warning. Part of the assessment is also about what benefits you would get from a pump, which may include stopping your diabetes getting in the way of sport, physical activity or work. It is also important that your own ability to cope with a pump is assessed, such as having the physical capability to manage a pump and also whether you will cope psychologically, particularly in the early days. Generally these are not formal assessments, although in some areas in the country they may be more formalised. It’s very likely that the assessments are carried out by the 'pump experts' in your diabetes teams, who are used to helping people get to grips with using a pump.

Other preparation

You may also be asked to attend local diabetes education programmes, particularly if you have not previously been calculating the amount of carbohydrate you eat. For some, just attending these programmes mean that they learn enough to be in better control of their diabetes and they decide they don't need a pump after all. And even if you are already counting carbohydrates, you may still be asked to have a refresher to make sure that you have the carbohydrate aspect really clear in your mind.

Choice of pump

Once it has been agreed that you have a pump, you may be given a choice of different types of pump - this doesn't happen everywhere, particularly in areas where specific contracts exist with pump companies, and also your own diabetes teams may feel more comfortable using certain types of pumps based on their own experiences. You may have an opportunity to take a pump away with you for a few days to get used to how it works and what the different functions are, and you may also get the opportunity to meet other people already using a pump to chat about their experiences.

Day one of pump therapy

The next step, of course, is to start using your pump. You may be asked to attend group sessions with others starting out, or you may be given an individual appointment. In some areas, you will be asked to use saline solution for 24 hours to get used to the button-pressing, or alternatively you will start using insulin in your pump straight away. You will need to make some adjustments to your existing insulin in the 24 hours before you start using your pump, to avoid too much overlap between your injected insulin and your pump insulin - your diabetes team will help you work out what doses will work the best for you.

Learning the practicalities

Practicalities include aspects such as where and how to insert your cannula, how to set up your pump, how to care for your equipment and your infusion sites, and how to troubleshoot if you suspect something isn't right. You may get information about these before the actual day you start using a pump, but even if that happens, it's easy to forget when you are under stress! You may want to develop some resources of your own, to help you remember, particularly the aspects you find difficult. It is also good know how to contact people if you get stuck - which may include your diabetes team, the pump manufacturing company, and other pump users. There may be useful internet sites as well that can help in a crisis.

Setting continuous insulin doses

To get going with your pump, you will need to set your hourly insulin doses - this is known as the 'basal rate'. Your diabetes team will help you with this, and are likely to have a standard way of calculating it. As a starting point, it is generally based on what has been happening with your diabetes so far - how much insulin you have been taking by injection, how frequently you have hypos or low blood glucose levels, and your overall diabetes control. It is also an estimate - so enough to get you started, but unlikely to be the perfect insulin dose for you. It is easiest to start with slightly lower doses than you will need, because that will help you avoid hypos in the first few days, and the dose can easily be adjusted as your blood glucose pattern starts to emerge. You will rely pretty heavily on your blood glucose readings to work out what to do with your insulin doses, and your diabetes team might advise you to reduce your testing if they think you are overdoing it - sometimes testing too frequently, before you have seen the full effect of the food you have eaten or the boluses of insulin you have given, will give a false picture and might mean that you take action that is unnecessary. The first few days can be frustrating - you have a new tool to manage your diabetes, but you are being 'held back' from using it fully! But it is all about taking it slowly - both you and your body are adjusting to a completely different way of managing your diabetes, and seeing these days as an opportunity to sit back and look properly at your diabetes, and make gradual changes to sort things out, is generally more helpful than constant fiddling that can result in your blood glucose levels swinging up and down a lot more.

Additional insulin doses

You will of course need to give extra doses of insulin, known as boluses, either what is known as a 'food bolus' to match the carbohydrate you are eating, or a 'correction bolus' to counteract a high blood glucose level. You may already have ratios you use, but if not, you will need to learn how much insulin matches how much carbohydrate for you personally, and also how much your blood glucose will drop for each additional unit of insulin you take. Don't worry if you are new to this - your health professional will be able to 'hold your hand' and work with you to find out what the best numbers will be for you to use. Many of the pumps come with 'bolus wizards' which can help suggest bolus amounts when you input the information they require - see the separate section for more information on these - but you will still need some personal ratios.

Ongoing support

Local services vary a lot in how they provide support - some will be able to offer you a 24 hour telephone advice service, and all should ensure that if you run into problems and can't get immediate answers, you have the ability to swap back to injection therapy for short periods. Also, over the first few weeks you are likely to have fairly frequent contact with your diabetes team. It can feel a little strange going back to being a novice with managing your diabetes, but it won't be long before you get confident in managing the basics - then it's just a case of deciding when you want to step off into the 'deep end' of experimenting with different pump settings!

We hope that has helped you grasp what services will be available for you when you are first starting to out with your insulin pump. Good luck!

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The Basics of Insulin Pump Therapy

nsulin pump therapy is becoming an increasingly popular option, mainly in treating Type 1 diabetes. This is because of the complete lack of insulin in this condition, meaning that calculations of insulin doses can be made with relative certainty, whereas in Type 2 diabetes, the factors of some ongoing insulin production plus potentially insulin resistance make these calculations less certain. This doesn't mean that insulin pumps can't be used in Type 2 diabetes, but their main use currently, and for the foreseeable future, is in Type 1 diabetes. Figures from 2010, shown on the INPUT website (see our 'pump websites and support' section), that around 8% of children and 2% of adults with Type 1 diabetes use insulin pumps.

Different models of pumps As technology increases, the types of insulin pumps available are becoming more sophisticated. Wireless models are being introduced, touchscreen technology is being used, and connections between pumps and blood glucose monitors are being made. Visiting the websites of the pump manufacturers and suppliers will help you find out about the current models available - see our 'pump websites and support' section for more information.

Why is pump therapy becoming more popular? In essence, it is a way of replacing someone's insulin production in a way that is fairly close to how they would produce their own insulin. That is, a pump delivers a small continuous supply of insulin which alters through the day according to individual requirements, plus extra doses (boluses) of insulin to match what carbohydrate is being eaten. In addition, all the insulin used in a pump is rapid-acting, so the potential variability of its release is taken away. Even the most sophisticated ‘conventional’ injection regimen, with one or two long-acting doses of insulin and 3 or more rapid-acting injections per day, is still quite a clumsy system by comparison, and also includes the use of insulin which has been manufactured to deliberately release more slowly to try and cover the times between injections.

And the downside?... Insulin pump therapy is not a perfect solution. It requires a lot of work during the set-up period, to learn what insulin-to-carbohydrate ratios and correction ratios work best, to identify which parts of the day need more or less insulin, and to find the best insulin doses for different activities and social situations. The intensity of the work needed to get the most from pump therapy does reduce after the first few weeks - or some would say it takes about 6 months to really get to grips with using a pump - but even then, there is still a considerable amount of work involved to keep on top of blood glucose levels, and even with this work, some people never achieve the exact results they hope for. It's not easy to identify whether this is more work than anyone would do than if they were taking multiple injections - people who have had an insulin pump for a year or more will probably say it's less work, but that might be because the more work you put in with a pump, the more you get out of it - whereas sometimes, even with hard work, multiple injection therapy still doesn't always give the results that it should!

The stigma of using a pump? Another aspect to think about is having something attached 24 hours a day - this really doesn't bother some people, but for those it does, it can be a major barrier, and for some, it can be the deciding factor regarding whether they start to use a pump or not. It can feel like an invasion of personal space, a visible signal of having diabetes, a distortion of body image, or simply something that isn't wanted. Pumps are getting cleverer - many of them are now wireless, with a small insulin reservoir and a separate handset for programming, so they look much less like medical devices. Plus, it has become a normal sight for people to be using hand-held devices such as mobile phones, so programming an insulin pump attracts much less attention than it used to. But it is still not possible to get away from the fact that a pump is worn 24 hours a day.

A summary of the facts:

  • An insulin pump is worn 24 hours a day
  • It is not a fix-it solution - so far, it is unable to make decisions for people about how much insulin to deliver
  • It can deliver small, precise insulin doses continuously
  • Additional doses can be programmed on demand
  • The continuous dose can be fine-tuned to someone's needs
  • Frequent blood glucose monitoring, good carbohydrate assessment and adjustment of the pump settings are needed for the best results
  • The person using the pump (or their parent/carer) has to learn how to programme it to get the best out of it
  • It's an option, alongside different insulin regimens, in the 'diabetes toolkit' - it's not for everyone
  • If the pump doesn't work for someone, it is ok to go back to injections
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Insulin Pumps

Hello, and welcome to our special section on insulin pumps. Here, you will find helpful information whether you live with diabetes or you are a health professional. There are many sources of information now available to help with management of insulin pumps, so rather than repeat what is already out there, we have selected some of the main aspects that we find are of most concern and interest. Use the links below to navigate to any of the pages

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