Should help.Offer self-monitoring of plasma glucose to a person newly diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes only as an integral part of his or her self-management education. Discuss its purpose and agree how
it should be interpreted and acted upon.
.Any PCT which is automatically discouraging the prescription of blood glucose testing strips is not acting in according with NICE's advice that self-monitoring may prove useful to people in their overall approach to self-care
we will be able to control it for you etc etc etc etc
tubolard said:we will be able to control it for you etc etc etc etc
That is so wrong, on so many levels. Primarily because the diabetes NSF acknowledges that the patient needs to 'own' the condition. The only person who can control BG levels is the patient. In order to do that, we need access to the right tools. In this instance strips, lancets and a meter.
Regards, Tubs.
caroluk said:Hia Brian,
I'm also a newly diagnosed type 2 and was worried there was a chance my dr would refuse testing strips especially after my DN refused me saying we would talk about it at my 4th app.
I already had a Ascencia Contour machine so i bought my first lot of strips ( £22.40 ) tested in the mornings - before meals - 2 hours after meals and before bed. Kept a food diary of everything i had eaten and test results which showed quite clearly showed me what spiked me.
I took this with me to my Dr and when i asked for strips he began the usual type 2's don't need to test blah blah - So i pulled out my diary and showed him my argument against his and why i needed to test as a newly diagnosed - That i wanted to be in control - That i believed with regular testing i could get in control - That by keeping a record i could adjust my lifestlye and how else could i do that without regular testing in these early days.
He wrote me out a script for one testing box and that i now on repeat with a review in 6 months.
I now how a good idea of what does spike me - Carbs! so i am lowing carbs - losing weight - and keeping good numbers. I test now once a day after tea and occassionally when i get up.
Testing has helped me feel more in control of diabetes than anything - I was anxious - irritable and feeling down right low before i was testing.
Good luck and let us know how you get on.
Carol xx
to assess changes in glucose control resulting from medications and lifestyle changes
Went to aforementioned doc on an unrelated matter, and he said: I assume your doing your own tests every morning ? What's your readings been like ?
Told him about the convo with DN and he went white, then red, then purple - started spluttering about something or other and said wait there while i go get you a machine. Unfortunately there was none in the surgery or the PCT clinic so he said if I bought my own, let him know what one it is and he would write me out a script, on repeat, for whatever machine I had.
He also rang me two days after seeing him, at work as well, to enquire how was I coping with doing my self tests and what the readings were.
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