Thanks I have used tee2 monitor recently but how do I figure out Ac1?Yes, dedfinitely get a meter, I use the Tee2 and am very happy with it.
When I was diagnosed, I bought a meter, went keto (very low carb 20g per day) and I logged my food and readings, before and after eating in an app called mysugr.
After a few days, it gave me an estimated hba1c number. It is based on the data you enter, so obviously the more data you enter the more accurate it becomes over time. I found it highly motivating.
Low carb is key to booting T2 into touch. The meter is key to keeping an eye on what your food is doing to you.
HiHi. If the weight loss continues beyond what you think is sensible do consider the possibility of being T1. This is very unlikely as you have had excess weight but it's always possible but don't worry about that unless you become really slim. I'm surprised the GP expects you to aim for 4.8% HBA1C. Few diabetics can achieve that. Anything below 6% is good and 5.5% may not be easy to achieve
Unfortunately you can't really although if you have very stable blood sugars you could kind of average out your readings for a guess.Thanks I have used tee2 monitor recently but how do I figure out Ac1?
A HbA1c is usually a lab test, but you can log your numbers in the MySugr app and it can give you an estimate. Or you can get an at-home test ($$$), but when it comes down to it, it's the usual finger prick ones that give you the best and immediate idea of what your blood sugars are doing.Thanks I have used tee2 monitor recently but how do I figure out Ac1?
Unfortunately you can't really although if you have very stable blood sugars you could kind of average out your readings for a guess.
It's best to get a test .. my surgery is now doing blood draws maybe check with yours?
A HbA1c is usually a lab test, but you can log your numbers in the MySugr app and it can give you an estimate. Or you can get an at-home test ($$$), but when it comes down to it, it's the usual finger prick ones that give you the best and immediate idea of what your blood sugars are doing.
Thank you I will call todayA HbA1c is usually a lab test, but you can log your numbers in the MySugr app and it can give you an estimate. Or you can get an at-home test ($$$), but when it comes down to it, it's the usual finger prick ones that give you the best and immediate idea of what your blood sugars are doing.
@annmaried: Diabetes.co.uk main site used to have an average glucose to HbA1c converter which I regularly used, but can no longer find since there's been some changes to the site (@DCUKMod ??), but I've found another option to convert here. The diabetes.co.uk converter gave slightly lower than my actual results, but was consistent enough that I could predict accurately what my HbA1c would be.
Unfortunately not - it was on the same page as this HbA1c to average glucose converter here - https://www.diabetes.co.uk/hba1c-units-converter.html - and doing the reverse conversion from average glucose to HbA1c.Robbity - Hopefully, this is what you were looking for? https://www.diabetes.co.uk/blood-sugar-converter.html
Unfortunately not - it was on the same page as this HbA1c to average glucose converter here - https://www.diabetes.co.uk/hba1c-units-converter.html - and doing the reverse conversion from average glucose to HbA1c.
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