Hi and welcome!
I agree with what
@13lizanne says.
It really comes down to personal choice and personal funds (if you are self funding your testing, as many of us T2s do).
All the conflicting advice out there comes down to a few really simple explanations:
- it is only worth testing your blood if you are willing to do something about it - by making lifestyle and diet changes that will give you better control
- most medical staff do not appreciate that this is possible, so they assume that any T2 who tests is just going to get stressed and upset at how bad their blood glucose is, while continuing to eat the very foods (carbs) that caused the high blood glucose in the first place. Mad, innit?
- the NHS can't afford to fund the testing kit (meter and strips) to every T2 so they have to come up with some kind of justification why testing isn't necessary.
- most NHS staff have never actually seen a T2 diabetic turn their life around, cut their blood glucose and drop their HbA1cs. Although as more and more of us do it, more and more staff are seeing us do it - but they rarely make the connection between testing and blood glucose control.
- it is written in the NICE guidelines that T2s only need to test if they are on insulin or other strong glucose lowering drugs (and for the reasons written above, most NHS staff agree with this)
Hope that helps.
