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john_yaya | 4 years ago

I worked on the Freestyle Libre, I’m thrilled to hear it’s at least a workable solution for you. When I was working at Abbott, I often volunteered for testing finger-stick devices, which made me appreciate a small part of what people with diabetes have to endure.

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ninjin|4 years ago

I am deeply grateful for your work and that of Abbott. The Libre has been life changing for me, possibly ever more so than getting a pump as it gave me a much clearer picture how my body reacts to different foods, exercise, lack of sleep, etc.

After about two years of usage I have encountered very few issues at all. My only complaint was that I would like to scold whoever crippled the sensors and readers somewhat by making them region specific for what I can only assume are purely market control reasons (not to mention that this is not obvious from the packaging or instructions from what I can tell and I only found out when talking to an Abbott representative that cautioned me that readers and sensors were not compatible between regions).

rstupek|4 years ago

I've used them and they're great just pricey

inetsee|4 years ago

I use a Freestyle Libre sensor and I like it better than finger sticks. When I was doing finger sticks I was averaging 4 tests a day; before each meal and at bedtime. With the Freestyle Libre I'm checking my glucose an average of 20 times a day. But the Freestyle Libre sensors are quite expensive. I have insurance so my out of pocket expenses are very low, but my provider bills $1074 for 2 sensors, which last for 4 weeks.

I have read comments from other posts that buyers without insurance can get sensors for substantially less, but they are still quite expensive. When I was doing finger sticks I could get enough test strips for a month for about $30.