Thanks, and wow! How great that is.In the UK, there is a national Diabetic Eye Screening Programme. Each local programme holds a database of everyone in their area who has diabetes. The Programme sends out letters (invitations) to all eligible people on the database every year offering them an appointment to have their retinas photographed. The photos are then examined for diabetic retinopathy by qualified and accredited graders using specialist software. If someone appears to have sight-threatening diabetic retinopathy they are " screen positive" and are referred for further tests and possible treatment by an ophthalmologist. If no retinopathy or only background retinopathy is detected, the person is "screen negative" and will be invited back the following year for more photographs.
Yes, and free at the point of care, of course.Thanks, and wow! How great that is.
Ok, so it looks like you were primarily diagnosed via the A1c. I'd say your best chance of having it reversed would be to have some subsequent A1c tests return normal. You've already said you went from 9.2 to 5.5 in three months, so I assume those are A1c numbers. That's a great effort, you must have been really motivated.My blood glucose was at 195. So the doctor recommended I have an A1C test. My A1C test was 9.2 and that sealed my fate,
Started reading about diabetes and got scared to death. Fear motivated me.Ok, so it looks like you were primarily diagnosed via the A1c. I'd say your best chance of having it reversed would be to have some subsequent A1c tests return normal. You've already said you went from 9.2 to 5.5 in three months, so I assume those are A1c numbers. That's a great effort, you must have been really motivated.
But on your health chart, it won't say alcoholic.Diabetes is like alcoholism.You can have given up drinking alcohol for a decade but you will still be an alcoholic.
But it will in your patient records it is all but impossible to get records amended in the NHS even when it involves down right fabrication in fact some people have had to withdraw from the NHS altogether as records are then deleted in order to do so.But on your health chart, it won't say alcoholic.
Research is now saying patients who had gestational diabetes prone to onset diabetes and may even be boarderline prediabetic.However well controlled diabetes is I think we are still considered always to be diabetics until a cure comes along. Gestational diabetes I think is the only exception
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?