“Designing An Insulin Regimen” In Type 1 Diabetes From Diabetes Education Online

For people with Type 1 Diabetes, intensive insulin therapy is best because it most closely mimics the way the pancreas in non-diabetics releases insulin to the body.

And for persons with type 1 diabetes, it is critical to to know how to count carbohydrates.

The following is from “Designing An Insulin Regimen” from Diabetes Education Online:

For Intensive Regimens:

When you are intensively managed with insulin your medical provider will prescribe an insulin regimen for you, but these are the general principles:

Your medical provider should prescribe:

  1. A basal or background insulin dose
    This will be prescribed as one or two injections of long acting insulin, or, if you are using an insulin pump, a daily infusion rate of continuous, small amounts of rapid acting insulin. The background/basal insulin dose is usually the same day to day. With an insulin pump you do have the option of temporarily changing the background rate for a few hours – up or down as needed!
  2. A bolus insulin dose to cover the sugar or carbohydrate in your food
    This will be presented as an insulin to carbohydrate ratio( I:CHO). The I:CHO ratio tells you how many grams of carbohydrate can be covered by one unit of rapid acting insulin. You will need to calculate how much carbohydrate you will eat, and take a dose of insulin that matches the food.  (To learn how to determine the amount of carbohydrates in each meal see Counting Carbohydrates from Diabetes Education Online).
  3. A bolus insulin dose to bring your blood sugar back to the normal range
    A high blood sugar correction bolus insulin dose to bring your blood sugar back into the target range. This will be presented as a correction factor. This correction factor refers to how much your blood sugar will drop after 1 unit of insulin rapid acting insulin. When your blood sugar is too high, you will need to calculate how much your blood sugar is over the target, and, based on the correction factor, take the dose of insulin that will bring you down into the desired range.

Common intensive regimens:

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