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963

Poorly disclosed bugs/code kills people.. More often than you think.

Archive: https://archive.today/q7tdP

From the post:

>I wrote last month about my diabetes diagnosis this year and my difficult choice to wear a proprietary device (called a CGM) on my arm 24/7 to continuously monitor my glucose levels. Like my friend and colleague, Karen M. Sandler — who previously made a much higher-stakes choice to receive a proprietary implanted defibrillator to keep her safe given her genetic heart condition — I reluctantly chose to attach proprietary hardware and software to my body.

Poorly disclosed bugs/code kills people.. More often than you think. Archive: https://archive.today/q7tdP From the post: >>I wrote last month about my diabetes diagnosis this year and my difficult choice to wear a proprietary device (called a CGM) on my arm 24/7 to continuously monitor my glucose levels. Like my friend and colleague, Karen M. Sandler — who previously made a much higher-stakes choice to receive a proprietary implanted defibrillator to keep her safe given her genetic heart condition — I reluctantly chose to attach proprietary hardware and software to my body.
[–] 0 pt

I asked if anyone had kept track with the prick method with it. He asked why they would do that.

I’m sorry to hear your doctor is mentally retarded. It must have been hard finding that out.

[–] 1 pt

I knew. I liked him because I could ask him to do stuff and he would make insurance cover it. If I wanted bloodwork or metformin or whatever, he was cool with it as long as my justifications made sense to him. I'd bring research papers and he'd make up ailments so I could get drugs that my insurance wouldn't cover because they were off label uses. But he moved a couple hours away and is at a different kind of practice so I'm stuck finding a new one.

I wish I didn't need one at all but buying prescription drugs from India can be hit or miss. At least he renewed my scripts for a year lol.