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Dapagliflosin 10mg prescribed again

billhp49

Member
Messages
14
Location
Devon
Type of diabetes
Type 2
Treatment type
Tablets (oral)
In late 2023 my Hba1c was 48 and surgery stopped 40mg Gliclazide and replaced it with 10mg Dapa.
Within days my fasting tedt had gone from 5.6 to 8.5 and climbed steadily to 10 over the next weeks. Phone calls to surgery met with "wait fir 3 months. By Jan 2024 Hba1c had increased to 61 and I ended up being urgently referred to Eye Infirmary retinopathy problem had arisen.
Benn attending Eye Inf since for check ups and tests. Following reinstatement of 40mg Gliclazide and subsequently drop in blood sugar no further action. Final check up

Surgery phoned yesterday, two Hba1c tests have been 45 so they insist 10mg Dapa to be started and have prescribed.
My NHS record shows all the preceding and I am worried that the whole fiasco us about to kick off again. If blood sugar peaks do I face serious consequences. Diabetic nurse won't listen to my objections.

Anti shared experience?

Regards,
Bill
 
I wouldn’t be risking my eye sight by changing back to a med that had caused eye problems in the past. I would ask for a second opinion, maybe with a GP. My question would be why change something that’s working ie two consecutive HbA1cs of 45. If you get nowhere with that, a complaint to the practice manager might be called for.
 
I wouldn’t be risking my eye sight by changing back to a med that had caused eye problems in the past. I would ask for a second opinion, maybe with a GP. My question would be why change something that’s working ie two consecutive HbA1cs of 45. If you get nowhere with that, a complaint to the practice manager might be called for.
Agree, bug I wonder if diabetes only means a tick box for to complete. My experience suggests no real knowledge or understanding of what it really means to be diabetic. My 25 years of being type 2 has I believe given me a better insight of what works and what doesn't. However not having the "expertise" of an NHS computer and checklist means I am only a patient. I know I face a battle but am happy to monitor me and keep their Triage system busy for change.
 
Agree, bug I wonder if diabetes only means a tick box for to complete. My experience suggests no real knowledge or understanding of what it really means to be diabetic. My 25 years of being type 2 has I believe given me a better insight of what works and what doesn't. However not having the "expertise" of an NHS computer and checklist means I am only a patient. I know I face a battle but am happy to monitor me and keep their Triage system busy for change.
I agree, there are a lot of tick boxes but we are the experts in our condition.
 
I agree, there are a lot of tick boxes but we are the experts in our condition.
Took multiple appointments, my prick test records for periods in 2023, and 2025 comparison, plus a comment from Eye Infirmary consultant and was represcribed Gliclazide. So am on the treatment which worked.
Dapagliflosin was actually prescribed without my agreement hence I really had to persist.
Thank goodness My Contour Plus downloads worked again. Another blood test in 6 months, can agree because I will know all the way how my Blood sugar is.
Should it really be so necessary to fight NHS presumtions?
 
Should it really be so necessary to fight NHS presumtions?
I hate the assumption that patients can't possibly judge what's best for themselves, living their own particular life. It's not the 1940s when "Doctor knows best" was the rule.

Give us enough reliable information so we can make the right decision for us. I'm possibly a bit less in awe of medical personnel than most as my best friend from Uni is now a GP, and I *know* I'm capable of understanding anything she can!

Wishing you continued success with the Gliclazide. I too am expecting a fight at my upcoming review as I've been warned the diabetes team at my surgery will probably want me to take a 'flozin - Gliclazide is apparently "old-fashioned" even though it worked for me and I never came close to hypo.
 
Absolutely agree.

We can calculate likely Hba1c results from our prick tests, I get prepared for a "fight" with surgery as their blood test looms. Regrettably our surgery has a reputation of failed diagnosing of anything more than a boil or other visible infection ( other patients comments on wedsite).

Most diabetics do know how they feel and what has worked or failed previously.
It shouldn't be a matter of fitting an NHS scheme of things. I am regularly told other meds would save me having to test to meet DVA requirements because I'm on Gliclazide. I simply don't have hypos and would prick test for my own satisfaction about my Diabetes progress ( plus of course I don't consider one three or six monthly test is sufficient.

Good luck.
 
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