Does this mean then that I just keep following a low carb diet to try & get level even lower please?Hope this helps
Thanks for that info. Bluetit, will keep at it then. My main worry was/is should I tell my travel insurance company or DVLC or just carry on regardless & trust that I won't have to go on Metformin again.You have had an HbA1c test which has shown that, on a sort of average over the previous 2 to 3 months, you have been running in the pre-diabetic range. This does not let you off the hook! If you return to your old eating habits the diabetic levels will return.
I'm afraid that a low/reduced carb diet is for life in most cases, even if you get your levels down under the 42 cut off. Some lucky people can maintain normal levels and eat a lot more carbs, but others can't.
Thank you so much for giving me all this information; I feel really encouraged & now see a light at the end of the tunnel.Thanks for that info. Bluetit, will keep at it then. My main worry was/is should I tell my travel insurance company or DVLC or just carry on regardless & trust that I won't have to go on Metformin again.
Wow looking at your results you put me in the shade, so thanks for the advice which I will strive to follow. Don't have too much problem with food but struggle with my alcohol although I only drink at weekends now. Well done you, if I can get to your level !!!!A few people on this forum have stated that they have been taken off the diabetic register. I would encourage you to keep going and see if you can get your levels down into the non-diabetic range. Well done with your progress.
Wow looking at your results you put me in the shade, so thanks for the advice which I will strive to follow. Don't have too much problem with food but struggle with my alcohol although I only drink at weekends now. Well done you, if I can get to your level !!!!
I think it depends on your GP as I have had a normal hba1c for 2 years and am still on the diabetic register whereas my work colleague had a normal reading for a year and was taken off the register. I may be wrong but I think that GPs get funding for diabetic patients so, being cynical, it makes sense to keep someone well controlled on the register as it makes their %s look good ( and my practice currently needs all the help it's given) for having controlled diabetics and it costs them little in treatment etc.I'm still on diabetic register but do now feel I have control until something goes wrong which is why I continue to monitor.
If it is reputable research it won't use the word 'cure'.I have seen recent research indicating that type 2 diabetes can be cured.
If you go back to eating the junk foods that gave you diabetes, your blood sugar shows diabetic levels again.
I get very tired of reading this kind of mis-information.
Your statement is factually incorrect and insulting enough for me to discard the rest of your post.
You really won't get very far if you offend every T2 reader by announcing/assuming that they caused their T2 by eating junk food.
I accept that you may have met some people who eat/ate junk food and got diabetes, but your logic fails if you try to draw cause and effect from that. FAR too many other variables.
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