For older T2 patients (over 65 years?) set in their ways and resistant to change
Advise cutting sugar and reducing starchy carbs
Offer a SIMPLE diet sheet, which doesn’t vary much from their usual way of eating, but aim for reducing carb intake.
Self blood testing is probably not important
6 monthly HbA1cs are probably sufficient monitoring.
(Complications take a time to develop, so are not such an issue in the elderly.)
Fair enough but they should get the info and then decide.set in their ways and resistant to change
I agree - this elderly 65-year-old would want to control their diabetes and test.sugarless sue said:.............Don't agree with this one,Hana.It would depend on the patient!!Some elderly certainly would want to control their diabetes and test,some would not.......
Deffo. I'm 23 now. I was 21 when diagnosed (2 days before I was 21). I'm not small (2st overweight and I'm tall/broad) but I have had one person remark that I got diabetes because I 'ate bad food while at uni and put on weight wso i got diabetes' when in actuality I lost weight (better exercise when you have no car!) and got it due to a viral infection. What's sad is that this girl used to study medicine. Thankfully she didn't complete her studies!!Mistakenly treating T1 as T2, soley because the patient is adult, could lead to tragedy.
Explain the weight gain effects of most common anti-diabetic medication and don’t tell patients using large doses of them to lose weight. You know they can’t
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