Cancer treatment and steroids given in vast quantities in A and E to keep me alive forced me into insulin. The consultant said he was not surprised my pancreas gave up and this is quite common.
I suspect a lot of people test before and after every meal. If you've already tested that meal several times in the past that is inappropriate I think. At least in terms of using Nhs money to do it
Strange this thread has come about.
I only yesterday emailed my MP who is a dr & deals with medical issue in Parliament.
Waiting on a reply.
Yep tory but she is good on the medical stuff.Hopefully not a Tory, or the reply might be another ostrich squawk...
I totally agree with junemc153 who was quoted in Diabetes Forum and said, "...one interesting thing is that they haven’t monitored whether self-managed BG levels rose or changed or how many more patients ended up on medication as a result of not testing!!! I am a perfect example of someone who stopped testing, then six months later found my BS had risen. It is so very necessary to check intermittently to avoid this from happening by becoming aware of what you're doing to cause the higher blood sugar levels. Type 2's cannot afford to get complacent about their testing.
Sorry but I don't agree and support MikeJ1973's view. To keep testing both before and after a meal seems pointless if you already know about that food or meal type. Do occasional sample testing but to do it regularly seems pointless. What is more important to avoid long-term damage is surely to test 2 hours after a meal fairly often to determine whether your medication, overall diet etc is affecting your blood sugar. It's important to know what the objective of any testing is bearing in mind cost to the NHS and the number of holes you want to make in your fingers!Not entirely true, my friend- though even if it were, the savings from avoiding the complications later would still more than pay for such "wastage" if even a tiny fraction of us paid attention to the results of testing and adjusted our diets and lifestyle accordingly. We are talking about a condition which can lead to blindness, amputations, kidney failure, and other such nastiness- none of it exactly cheap.
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Ahhhh.The member you have quoted is on insulin, so they are right that they do have to test before driving.
I agree to a degree.It's a tough call. 20million could be better spent in the Nhs on things like oncology rather tush testing tips for type 2s. On the other hand if a percentage of people receiving Nhs subuddy for strips reduces bs levels then it could save 21 million. Which makes it worthwhile. Tough call but I see all sides
What about dvla restrictions on testing? We aren't supposed to drive if we haven't tested within 2 hours of a journey.
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