Separate names with a comma.
Hi @DaveH2 A similar question was asked some years ago on this forum...
Congratulations @Sheila L. You are going in the right direction and should keep on doing what you have been doing and that includes eating porridge.
Hello @Sheila L you should really be supported on this forum in your actions to deal with your diabetes diagnosis, rather than be given "advice"...
Who is Hypocrites? Are hypos named after him or her?
I found the following on the Diabetes Australia website under the heading "Position statement on low carb eating for people with diabetes." It is...
White bread is over-processed, high in calories and of little nutritional value, whereas whole grain bread is high in fibre, vitamin B and other...
I don't know why but @daisy1 keeps referring to the old NICE guidelines about self testing. The new guidelines currently in force from 2015...
If neither of the post-prandial readings is correct, then how can one assume that the single pre-prandial reading of 5.7 is correct?
Raw apples have fibre which lowers the glycemic load which prevents the blood level from spiking. Stewed apples have the same amount of sugar as...
Hi Alfie, I tested whilst losing weight but have not bothered since my Hba1C stabilised in the low 30s about three years ago. If you keep you...
I agree with that. One has only got to take three readings at the same time with the same meter to get three different test results, yet some...
Thank you @Guzzler and @Alison Campbell I would not presume to give anyone advice as to whether they should or should not test and therefore...
I was diagnosed as T2 back in 2013. I recall then looking around and noticing the NICE guidelines then current which had first been published in...
I would hazard a guess that if the overworked doctor and nurse were aware that you had lost weight to the extent that your BMI went from 31 to...
So to summarise, lose weight and then keep that weight off by following the NHS Eatwell Plate guidelines to give a statistically significant...
So we could have at least two Newcastle Diets.
Looking at the product information of the Cambridge Diet Plan shakes, it seems that each shake has 145 KCals and 14.5g of carbs, so your...
http://www.ncl.ac.uk/media/wwwnclacuk/newcastlemagneticresonancecentre/files/direct-protocol.pdf
If you're going to be a stickler for accuracy then the protocol published by the team conducting the research states as follows: "A commercial...
The shakes which are available on the Cambridge Weight Plan each seem to contain about 2 to 3 grams of fat and 14 to 15 grams of carbohydrates....