I was diagnosed T1 in 1998 and the age of 36, since then I have had all kinds of advice from well meaning individuals but in the end managed my diabetes based on research and medical advice.
The question I am asking relates to the internet where everyone has an opinion and declares themselves to be an expert nad comes up with the latest FAD cure. Do you absorb all of this or keep you own counsel?
I think it really depends on what kind of person you are. I have relatives who will fall for anything, and I do mean anything, Facebook pushes on them. But they'll laugh at a diet that's kept my blood sugars in the normal range for 7 years, with the test results to prove it. Mind you, they're experiencing cancer, heart failure and peripheral neuropathy, all of which is not helped by raging blood sugars, in part due to a very high carb, binge-eque diet and lots and lots of steroids. Type 2 across the board like myself, no T1's. At the moment regular books confuse me, but I'm fine plowing through medical texts; those I can still follow, no problem. (How my brain works? Your guess is as good as mine...) I doubt any of them have ever tried to crack a book about T2 or any other condition they've faced, and Google is too difficult, so.... That's what doctors are for, and they'll just take pill a and wonder why they now need pill b and c, as a isn't actually doing much.
Like I said, what kind of person is going over the information? Do they know what it's about, do they understand what it implies or claims, can they check and compare the data... Or is anything real because it's on the internet, so it must be so? You don't need a science degree to have healthy skepticism, though I guess it might help... But I've managed without one, so far. Or, at least, I have a journalistic background, maybe that helps when it comes to checking sources... But just having common sense should be at the basis on this, I suppose.
For me personally, if it sounds plausible because of scientific, or (in case of too little previous research as is the case with my husband's Long Covid, currently) anecdotal evidence, I'll try it, and see what happens. Whether other conditions react, what blood sugars do via regular testing etc.... Which isn't for everyone. Opinions galore on any and all diets, treatments and so forth, so yeah.... I just tested and checked what worked for me, did the same with my husband... I think the same went for a whole bunch of people here, really. We were our own guinea pigs. I guess I absorb what doesn't need filtering out, and keep my own counsel then..?