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Bad advice on Diet?!?

chew824

Member
Messages
9
Hi everyone,

I'm pretty new to this Diabetes lark having been diagnosed in February. The advise I have been given by the diabetic nurse at my surgery seems to contradict what I read on the forum. Many people are being told or are choosing to eat very low carb diets. However I haven't been asked to count carbs and have been discouraged from doing blood tests. The advice has been to swap to brown bread, brown rice, brown spaghetti etc, more pulses and beans, more green leafy veg... cut out sugars, be aware of the GI of foods. I have asked to speak to a dietician and have a referral to arrange but wanted to get people's opinion of this advice. My family who are medically trained but not diabetic experts are furious at the care I'm getting but I can't decide whether it's bad or not?!?!

For a little background I was BS of 15.1 which dropped to 8.7 using diet and has since dropped to 7.6 taking 1 x 500mg Metformin (which I have been asked to increase every two weeks by one until I'm on 4 a day, 2 for breakfast and 2 for dinner/tea).

Anyone have an opinion on it? I've seen a few comments about poor diabetic care and wondered whether mine was considered it bad? Help!!! It all seems rather confusing to me...

Added - Interesting I've just had my first hba1c result and it's 75 (9%)... eek!
 
Hi and welcome,
I am a typ1 diabetic. We all need some carbs, this keeps us from hypo's or dropping to a low level bs. Like you have said i would ask to speak to a dietician as they can give you alternative foods. If you can follow the low carb then it would be better for you.
Hopefully daisy01 will be along, she is a type 2
Sorry if i haven't helped much but i think you need professional advice to get you started.
Take care
Tracey
 
Hi Chew and welcome to the forum The most important thing about choosing what to eat is by testing before, and 2 hours after meals to see what effect each food has on your levels in spite of the fact they tell you not to test. You don't necessarily have to do a low carb diet but you do need to reduce the carbohydrates you eat. This is a completely individual thing and everyone is different as we say on here. The guidelines are just guidelines and you have to find out for yourself. You may have seen this information I give to new members but you should try out what it says and see if it works for you. The standard NHS instructions are not the best advice you could receive. Carry on asking questions and there will usually be someone here to help.

 
Hi chew824 and welcome to the forum.

Yes I was discouraged from testing as well but ignored it as I reasoned how else will I know what is safe for me to eat. Also the NICE guidelines state you should test as a Type 2 if you understand and react to the readings you get.

On the diet and carb / gi question.

There are a number of ways a Type 2 can treat their condition but basically it comes down to three things. Firstly the amount of carbohydrates you eat, secondly the amount of drugs you want to take and finally how much risk with your blood sugar levels are you willing to take.

If you want to get your blood sugars back into a safe range then the majority of forum members would tell you to reduce your carbohydrates especially the starchy ones like rice, pasta, bread, cereals and anything else made with flour. Its just taken for granted that you will restrict drastically or completely remove all straight sugary things from your diet.

You can think that the standard NHS diet puts more emphasis on starchy carbs but will then expect you to take drugs to compensate and expects that you wont mind a relatively low regard to blood sugar risks. For an informed view on safe blood sugar levels this link is good if a bit depressing. http://www.phlaunt.com/diabetes/14045678.php

A lot of us don't accept the standard NHS view and in fact neither do a growing number of other countries health services and will tell you to restrict your carbohydrates far more than the standard NHS dietary guidelines. You can restrict in a number of ways but the two most common are through carb counting where you actually count the number of grams of carbs you eat a day and through portion control. If you carb count you can get the grams of carbs off the backs of packets but be sure to use the total count and not just the "of which sugars" amount. If you do it this way a good place to start would be to aim for around 120 - 150g of carbs a day in total which is the same kind of amount you would be recommended to eat by the Swedish health service.

The other way is to not bother with the counting but to just use portion control where you just reduce the size of the portions you are eating.

In both cases testing your blood sugars is then highly recommended as it will allow you to adjust your carb intake up or down so that you can keep your blood sugars safe.

Effectively it can work out that if you are willing to go on a very low carb diet you may find after a period of time you can control your blood sugars with no medication what so ever. If you pick a slightly higher level (like me) then you may need to take a simple safe and effective drug like Metformin to help a bit. With Metformin you don't get the risk of hypos and it doesn't put additional stress on your already overworked pancreas. If you want to still eat more carbs then you may need to take stronger drugs. The key thing is testing to ensure you are keeping safe.

Hope that helps and keep asking questions.
 
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