stevie24 said:Hi All,
I have been diagnosed as type one for 2yrs and have not yet had a retinopathy screening yet, this is partly my fault and partly NHS, I should have chased it as much as them. Anyway, I have always been squeamish about my eyes, can somebody tell me what the test involves and also what the treatment involves if needed after screening proves problems exist? Also does anybody know the chances of developing eye problems as a type one that the screening will pick up? I am considering opting out to be honest so just wondered about this stuff before making an informed decision,
Many Thanks
If you don't mind me saying so,stop looking for opt outs, you want the stats to justify not going. Everybody has strongly recommened testing. Remember testing doesn't force you to do anything further, but IF they find something then you have to decide, do you want to go blind slowly, or get it fixed.stevie24 said:Thanks for the feedback all, general consensus is not to opt out then, and does anybody know about the prevalence or statistics around developing these sorts of complication?
Retinopathy will occur if you have high BG readings (typically HbA1c of > 7.5%) over an extended period and the longer the period and higher the BG then the greater the potential damage, which then requires laser treatment once detected on the annual eye screening.stevie24 said:Thanks for the feedback all, general consensus is not to opt out then, and does anybody know about the prevalence or statistics around developing these sorts of complication?
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