stuffedolive
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 542
- Location
- The Marches
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Diet only
- Dislikes
- Daily Mail, you know the sort
Why don't so many GPs listen to the patient?
I recently had some bloodtests for my increasingly frequent night-time headaches. I was pleased to get the tests as I have not had a diabetes review for 15 months and that was the only one in nearly 2 1/2 years.
I managed to talk to a GP today - a locum I think, who had just one thing to say, your Hba1c is 50 and you need to go on metformin and statins. Nothing about my headaches.
I tried to inform him (not that he was listening) that I have manged my T2 by diet and exercise for 20 years helped by having regular 6 monthly reviews, and that I have kept records of blood test results and dietary and exercise regimes to back up my success in keeping my T2 in control, with Hba1c usually in the mid-low 40's. And my GP has always congratulated me in the past.
I tried to suggest that the reason my Hba1c was 50 was because I had not been tested for the last 15 months and my normal routines had been upset my the pandemic,. Consequently what I really needed was a return to regular 6 monthly testing so that I could 'keep my eye on the ball' and get that Hba1c down without medication as I have in the past. Also I questioned his advice regarding statins as my records show I have had an adverse reaction to statins in the past which compromised my ability to exercise. Again he wasn't listening.
He wasn't interested in anything I had to say. He told me that what I had said didn't make sense, although he didn't explain why, and just repeated that I needed to be on metformin and statins because my Q-risk was 21% (this is, of course, wholly a factor of my age and T2 status and therefore outside my control).
20 years of successful management of my condition, dismissed, just like that. This was the most disappointing experience I have had with a GP in the last 20 years. Thankfully, I'll be moving house soon and moving to a new GP.
Rant over. :-(
I recently had some bloodtests for my increasingly frequent night-time headaches. I was pleased to get the tests as I have not had a diabetes review for 15 months and that was the only one in nearly 2 1/2 years.
I managed to talk to a GP today - a locum I think, who had just one thing to say, your Hba1c is 50 and you need to go on metformin and statins. Nothing about my headaches.
I tried to inform him (not that he was listening) that I have manged my T2 by diet and exercise for 20 years helped by having regular 6 monthly reviews, and that I have kept records of blood test results and dietary and exercise regimes to back up my success in keeping my T2 in control, with Hba1c usually in the mid-low 40's. And my GP has always congratulated me in the past.
I tried to suggest that the reason my Hba1c was 50 was because I had not been tested for the last 15 months and my normal routines had been upset my the pandemic,. Consequently what I really needed was a return to regular 6 monthly testing so that I could 'keep my eye on the ball' and get that Hba1c down without medication as I have in the past. Also I questioned his advice regarding statins as my records show I have had an adverse reaction to statins in the past which compromised my ability to exercise. Again he wasn't listening.
He wasn't interested in anything I had to say. He told me that what I had said didn't make sense, although he didn't explain why, and just repeated that I needed to be on metformin and statins because my Q-risk was 21% (this is, of course, wholly a factor of my age and T2 status and therefore outside my control).
20 years of successful management of my condition, dismissed, just like that. This was the most disappointing experience I have had with a GP in the last 20 years. Thankfully, I'll be moving house soon and moving to a new GP.
Rant over. :-(