Although AID systems seem to promise almost effortless diabetes management, there can be a learning curve, especially if you’re not already using an insulin pump.
“Once they’re on it and they learn how to troubleshoot when things go wrong,” says Hall, “the results are mostly really good. That’s the biggest hurdle: getting through the initial education.”
For people with long-standing diabetes, it may be scary to reduce your own monitoring and to trust an app to manage your blood sugar levels.
“The hardest thing to do is trust the system,” says Thrasher. “You’re asking people with type 1 diabetes to let go of the control they have been so used to over the years, of having to manage diabetes themselves. Giving up that control and letting a system do it for you is something that’s new, and it can be frightening.”
Hall also says some people are simply more ready than others for the complexities of diabetes education and the technology that comes with it.
“Some people are just ready from the moment they are diagnosed to start using a CGM and get on a pump and do what they need to do,” says Hall. “I would say a highly motivated person who wants to learn an AID system is going to learn how to do anything. If you see they have that level of medical literacy, they have support at home, they’re able to troubleshoot and know how to ask for assistance, that’s someone who could definitely get started early on this technology.”

