Certain primary-care doctors may also delay insulin therapy because they believe that injected therapies are unpopular. Dr. Riddle explains that, in fact, people usually find insulin therapy relatively easy to adapt to, and that some doctors "tend to underestimate what patients are willing to do when it is necessary." Additionally, insulin pens are now available, which allows for an easier and more accurate administration of insulin.
Sorting Out Side Effects
Other doctor and patient concerns pertain to the cost of insulin therapy, and side effects such as weight gain and hypoglycemia. While people on insulin therapy still experience weight gain and have to be cautious about hypoglycemia, Drs. Moghissi and Riddle say that today's insulins are very pure, allowing for better blood sugar control, fewer allergic reactions and fewer episodes of hypoglycemia. Originally, doctors used insulin derived from cattle or pigs, but they now use either a human insulin manufactured by "recombinant" methods or insulin with a structure that closely resembles human insulin.
The risk of hypoglycemia is also better managed today because insulin is available in different forms, including short-acting, medium-acting and long-acting forms. While the short-acting treatment lasts a few hours, longer-term therapies may be given just once a day. Sometimes, a longer-acting insulin is given as "background" while the shorter-acting insulin is given with meals and will closely "match" the rise in blood sugar that occurs when you eat.
The bottom line, diabetes specialists say, is that if other methods are not controlling blood sugar levels, don't risk diabetes complications by avoiding insulin therapy.
"The general advice is that type 2 diabetes should be treated carefully and aggressively from the start," Dr. Riddle says. "When the pills don't work, it's really not a good idea to wait to start insulin. Insulin therapy is a safe, effective treatment that has proven itself, and it's become even more important now that people are living longer with diabetes and need to maintain blood sugar control for the whole lifespan."