Or Gliclizide / other sulfonylureas due to potential hypo riskThe NICE guidelines don't say that Type 2s should be prescribed testing equipment, unless they are on insulin:
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I guess I'm pretty lucky here in Lincolnshire
I was diagnosed 2 months ago and given a glucometer plus 150 testing strips
Many of us here, including myself, prefer not to change lancets every time we test. Indeed I can't remember the last time I changed one - it must have been months ago! I never bother taking spare lancets with me when I take my testing kit out of the house. When I do change a lancet, I just put the old one in an old strip tub, and when that is full I put it in the bin with all my other non-recyclable rubbish.I don't want my home or car cluttered by sharp boxes
Are you saying your GP will prescribe you a meter and testing supplies, but not your preferred option, the Accuchek? If that is the case, you are jolly lucky, as most of us are not given any sort of meter and strips etc at all. I think maybe you are exaggerating the inconvenience of using eg the Codefree meter. I have been using the Codefree and its rival the TEE2 for nearly a year now. I test many times a day, but I really don't find either of them at all difficult to use. My biggest difficulty when testing out of the house is finding a suitable place to wash and dry my hands and then test. However I am going to send for some wipes that will substitute for the hand-washing, and that should solve most of that problem. IMO the difficulty of testing in and out of the home is dwarfed by the difficulties of following a low carb diet.their cop out is to prescribe the cheapest version
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