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CGM and getting driving licence back
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<blockquote data-quote="tigger" data-source="post: 1686453" data-attributes="member: 11023"><p>Have a look at the average bs needed to get an in range hba1c. It's higher than 6. No one knows for sure why some people have complications and others don't. All they can say is statistically those with higher hba1cs do. However an hba1c is an average it can hide large spikes and drops. There's a school of thought currently that the consistency of constant in range readings at a higher level is more important if you can generally avoid massive spikes. Reality is no one knows and there's no guarantees. Have a bad hypo behind the wheel you have a much higher certainty of injuring/ killing yourself or others. A bad hypo can also kill/cause brain damage too. Do your best to walk the tight rope and don't mess with DVLA. That is a sure way to lose a licence.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tigger, post: 1686453, member: 11023"] Have a look at the average bs needed to get an in range hba1c. It's higher than 6. No one knows for sure why some people have complications and others don't. All they can say is statistically those with higher hba1cs do. However an hba1c is an average it can hide large spikes and drops. There's a school of thought currently that the consistency of constant in range readings at a higher level is more important if you can generally avoid massive spikes. Reality is no one knows and there's no guarantees. Have a bad hypo behind the wheel you have a much higher certainty of injuring/ killing yourself or others. A bad hypo can also kill/cause brain damage too. Do your best to walk the tight rope and don't mess with DVLA. That is a sure way to lose a licence. [/QUOTE]
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