A small study presented at the Annual European Diabetes Conference in Lisbon, Glucose in September 2011 found that in diabetic patients with very severe insulin resistance who inject a very large dose of insulin per day (>60 units of insulin in a single injection, with a total of about 240-250 units of insulin per day), an equal aliquot of insulin injected at the same site each time, at different sites It facilitates the absorption and utilization of insulin. At 12-month follow-up, it was found that compared to those patients who were injected at the same site, the diabetic patients who were injected separately had a significant improvement in their blood glucose levels and a significant decrease in glycated hemoglobin, from 10.3% to 8.8%, while the control group had an increase from 10% to 10.4%. Our diabetic patients generally do not inject up to 240-250 units/day due to the difference in body weight, but if your total insulin is more than 200 units per day, you should consider separate insulin injections by site.