Well the nurse is wrong, a simple blood test can at least indicate whether you are T2 with certainty and T1 and maybe others with some
certainty.
Metformin is the standard first treatment after diet for T2, it is available in a slow release form and will help a lot with stomach problems.
To not be able to tell you what sort of diabetic you are is strange, and I wonder if the nurses reaction might have something to do with her feeling stressed in not knowing what to tell you.
I suppose it's all down to which doctor you see, I know I could make an appointment and ask for a test and if it is reasonable he would do one.
The test I would have thought they will arrange is a G.A.D. (Glutamic Acid Decarboxylase Autoantibodies test) and maybe a c-peptide test to see how much insulin your body is making.
11 - 13% I am guessing is your HbA1c result again I guess that is is an approxiamtion of the now standard mmol/mol measurement
(11% = 97 and 13% = 119 mmol/mol), it would normally be shown as a definate value not a range so it might be two different results?
The good news is that whilst those readings are not good they are not bad enough to get worried about in the short term.
So think positive, you now know that the NHS diet is to high in carbs for most of us, that you don't get on with the nurse, (and back in the early days I had a couple of "discussions" about diet, and many of us have, now I just nod and smile!) and that when you get to see the doctor he will, without doubt, have some interesting notes on the computer. If you want you can ask to see those notes, I have and he was quite happy to let me see them.
You could ask the doctor (when he arranges for the blood tests, as I am sure he will) why the nurse said what she did.
So keep plodding on, you will get there in the end, we all do!
In the meantime, keep an eye on the carbs, keep losing weight (6kg is a whole STONE well done), and try a bit of gentle excercise, walking for 10 or 20 minutes is a good start.
H
EDIT With a quote from
http://www.patient.co.uk/doctor/Glucose ... -Tests.htm
"There are a variety of definitions and diagnostic criteria for concepts such as impaired fasting glucose (IFG), impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), the metabolic syndrome and 'prediabetes'.
The most important concern for primary care practitioners is that they can identify those patients with frank type 1 or type 2 diabetes, and be able to advise and monitor patients with indicators of impaired glucose metabolism who are at risk of developing type 2 diabetes"
The red font is my doing