Ronancastled
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 1,234
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Diet only
This is something that's annoyed me since diagnosis. The first thing we find when we Google our condition is that diabetes is a progressive chronic condition yet prediabetis is a preventable state.
What were talking is an average blood sugar of 7.6 vs 7.8, it's not a definitive line in the sand. It runs the risk of making some newly diagnosed give up hope.
I have had some great success along my journey which I have documented here.
https://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/fbg-4-1-hba1c-33-and-passed-ogtt.175834/
I believe the narrative has to change. The clinicians are too focused on metrics and not the individual patient. The messy terminology of resolved/remission needs proper criteria agreed across all bodies and not just left to individual practices.
I've read of patients declared resolved with one HbA1c in the mid 40's whereas others having low 30's for years getting the condescending "well controlled " from their surgery nurse. Had that patient never reached 48 then they would never feel like they were a failure for life.
Back pre 1997 you wouldn't have recieved a full diagnosis unless your FBG was 140 mg/dl (7.8). The grey area is far wider than the medical community would lead you to believe. The potential for improvement and a return to normoglycemic is far more variable than a decimal point.
What were talking is an average blood sugar of 7.6 vs 7.8, it's not a definitive line in the sand. It runs the risk of making some newly diagnosed give up hope.
I have had some great success along my journey which I have documented here.
https://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/fbg-4-1-hba1c-33-and-passed-ogtt.175834/
I believe the narrative has to change. The clinicians are too focused on metrics and not the individual patient. The messy terminology of resolved/remission needs proper criteria agreed across all bodies and not just left to individual practices.
I've read of patients declared resolved with one HbA1c in the mid 40's whereas others having low 30's for years getting the condescending "well controlled " from their surgery nurse. Had that patient never reached 48 then they would never feel like they were a failure for life.
Back pre 1997 you wouldn't have recieved a full diagnosis unless your FBG was 140 mg/dl (7.8). The grey area is far wider than the medical community would lead you to believe. The potential for improvement and a return to normoglycemic is far more variable than a decimal point.
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