Remember when insulin meant a vial, a syringe, and a prayer? Not anymore. Insulin pens are now standard — pre‑filled, discreet, and accurate. Insulin pumps are for tech‑savvy patients, delivering tiny doses throughout the day. And smart caps? They attach to a vial and track how many units you've used. The India diabetes market forecast shows that insulin therapy remains the largest treatment segment, but connected devices are growing faster.
What's new in India? Basal insulin analogs (glargine, degludec) that last 24‑42 hours — fewer injections, less hypoglycemia. Also, biosimilar insulins from local companies like Biocon, priced 40% lower than imported brands. The India diabetes market analysis notes that retail pharmacies are the dominant channel, but online pharmacies are catching up fast — especially for chronic refills.
The challenge? Many patients still use human insulin (cheaper but riskier) and reuse needles (dangerous). Education is the missing piece.
The bottom line: if you're on insulin, ask your doctor about analog insulins and smart devices. They cost more upfront but save money on complications later. And never reuse a needle — it's not worth the infection risk.