The little white hen
Well-Known Member
I'd be inclined to agree with the Metformin statement, although some people have experienced them.
As for blood testing? The sad reason T2s aren't supported with strips by the NHS is purely cost. The NHS just can't afford it. What I find saddest of all is that they can't just tell us that. I mean. Why lie, when the truth will do very nicely?
As the point I was diagnosed, I had the predictable testing conversation with the nurse I was seeing. Her approach was as you have experienced. When I asked her if she were in my shoes, if she would be happy with 3, 6 or however many monthly testing, she went all quiet, avoiding and squirming on me. That told me all I needed to know.
If nothing else, your home testing will help reinforce the impact of what you're doing. Change is hard. Somewhere along the line, we all think, "I just want all this to go away", or "Nobody would know if I had a couple of weeks off........" And of course, they mightn't. But we would know.
If I'm having one of those days, I look back through my old records (I keep them on a phone app), and look at my scores when first diagnosed, and I really don't want to see those again. Avoiding too many carbs and the sugary stuff gives me the best chance of that being the case, and confirmation and reinforcement by my day-to-day blood scores really buoys me up.
It's up to you how you go forward. The costs, using the Codefree meter and strips are fairly modest, and once you have a real handle on how you're doing, you may not feel the need to test every day, but having that ability is really critical to me.
Thank you I will do a little more research and really consider testing to give me a guide if not everyday. I can now tell what raises my sugar by feel and avoid those foods.