Discover our Tech Driven Diabetes Care CGM, Insulin Pumps, and Smart Devices with 25+ Years of Expertise.

Dr. Ashalata provides skilled, compassionate, technology-driven diabetes care. With a focus on your CGM, insulin pump, smart device usage, and general well-being, each device plan guarantees individualized assistance.

A Simple Introduction

What Is Technology Driven Diabetes Care?

Modern gadgets are used in technology-driven diabetes care to assist you more easily and precisely monitor and control your blood sugar levels. It goes beyond daily injections and conventional glucometers. Continuous Glucose Monitors (CGM), insulin pumps, and smart pens are examples of devices that automate insulin delivery, minimize finger pricks, and offer real-time data. This method gives you the ability to see trends, avoid highs and lows, and make wise choices. For improved diabetes management and quality of life, Dr. Ashalata assists you in selecting, configuring, and optimizing these technologies.

Why Traditional Glucometers Are No Longer Enough for Modern Diabetes Management

Conventional glucometers provide you with a single glucose reading at a time. They overlook post-meal increases, hazardous nocturnal highs and lows, and subtle patterns between inspections. Continuous data, trends, and alarms are provided via CGM technology. For patients who require more stringent control, frequently have lows, or wish to achieve reversal, Dr. Ashalata suggests CGM. Power comes from knowledge. Diabetes care is transformed by real-time data.

25+ Years of Evolution

Dr. Ashalata's Experience with Diabetes Technology

Dr. Ashalata has over 25 years of experience and has seen firsthand how diabetes technology has advanced. She started off with glass syringes and conventional glucometers. After that, she started using insulin pens, sophisticated insulin pumps, and real-time continuous glucose monitors. She now incorporates CGM data analytics, hybrid closed-loop systems, and smart pens into her daily work. She has assisted hundreds of patients in switching from numerous daily injections to pumps and from finger pricks to sensors. Because of her experience, she is able to determine which device is best for each patient. She is aware of the practical everyday difficulties, insurance navigation, and technological subtleties. Her decades of practical knowledge with each iteration of diabetic technology is beneficial to you. Have faith in her knowledge. She has witnessed everything.

Innovations in Diabetes Care

Diabetes Technology At A Glance

Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM)

A tiny sensor called a continuous glucose monitor (CGM) is worn on your arm. Every few minutes, it transmits real-time data to your receiver or phone. You don’t need to puncture your fingers. You can check time-in-range, trends, and notifications for highs and lows. CGM gives you immediate insight into how insulin, food, and exercise affect your blood sugar. For greater control and comfort, Dr. Ashalata recommends CGM.

Insulin Pumps & Smart Pens

Insulin pumps are small devices worn on the body that deliver continuous insulin throughout the day. They replace multiple daily injections. Smart pens are reusable devices that track insulin doses, timing, and send data to your phone. Both improve accuracy and convenience. Dr. Ashalata helps you choose the right device based on your lifestyle, glucose patterns, and comfort level. Automation means fewer decisions and better control.

CGM vs. Insulin Pump vs. Smart Pen
Which Technology Is Right for You?

CGM continuously monitors your blood sugar levels. Anyone who wants real-time data without pricking their finger is going to love it. Insulin pumps are ideal for people who require several daily injections since they automatically supply insulin. For people who prefer injections but need data, smart pens monitor insulin dosages and timing. CGM is used alone by many patients. Some integrate CGM with smart pens or pumps. In order to suggest the ideal technology mix, Dr. Ashalata evaluates your comfort level, glucose patterns, and lifestyle. A one-size-fits-all solution does not exist. Your decision is unique.

Type 1, Type 2 or Gestational Diabetic

Who Benefits Most from Technology Driven Care?

Technology-driven care is beneficial for all types of diabetes. CGM and insulin pumps for strict control are most beneficial for type 1 diabetics. CGM helps type 2 patients avoid highs and lows, particularly those on insulin. Patients with gestational diabetes use CGM to avoid numerous finger pricks throughout pregnancy. CGM can be used momentarily to study the effects of diet, even in patients with prediabetes. Technology is prescribed by Dr. Ashalata depending on your individual needs rather than the type of diabetes you have. Everyone is entitled to contemporary treatment.

Book a Technology Consultation

Ready to Upgrade Your Diabetes Management?

Common questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Learn about CGM, insulin pumps, smart pens, and Dr. Ashalata’s technologically advanced approach to contemporary diabetes care.

No. A tiny, delicate inserter is used to apply CGM sensors. The majority of people have little or no pain. For seven to fourteen days, the sensor remains active. You receive application, data reading, and troubleshooting training from Dr. Ashalata. You wouldn't believe how easy it is.

No, CGM can be used in the near term to identify trends or in the long term to maintain control. Although pumps are usually long-term, they can be halted if reversal is accomplished. Dr. Ashalata conducts routine evaluations.

No. Technology is not a cure; rather, it is a potent tool for improved control. It offers automation and real-time data. Reversal through food, lifestyle, and weight control is necessary for the cure. Your reverse journey is efficiently supported by technology.