hi luke
know exactly what you mean...been t1 12 yrs & found that the medical profession don't like to offer up more help & support without prompting. i've come across a lot of 'if it ain't broke, don't fix it' attitudes, but only recently realised that what looks fine to them (say, an hbA1c of 7...) may be achieved through many low readings as well as high.
the best help i ever had was before & during pregnancy (no help to you i know!!), but before and after that...poor. it was only whilst pregnant i was advised to split my background insulin in 2 (resulting in 5 jabs a day, but that wasn't that diff to 4 really), this resulted in more stable (haha, sometimes anyway) BG readings.
only recently with a (wrongly read by the doc :roll: ) A1c of 10.7, was i offered any help (doc had told me BG not A1c, durr!). before then i was chasing referrals which never got put through (doc had dismissed as my control looked ok to him :x ). i am now awaiting an appt at the diabetic clinic & appt with dietician who will guide me on a DAFNE-esque (you know, carb counting/diabetes education course type thing) which will hopefully renew my interest in learning how to balance what goes in my mouth in relation to how much insulin i inject.
get on to your diabetes specialist nurse (ask your surgery who yours is, don't know if every surgery has one now?)...who you can pester to get you onto a DAFNE type course, where you can learn all about carb/insulin ratio's.
i def agree that this forum highlights the lack of knowledge some of us have about our diabetes. lots of experts on ere! (i ain't one of em)
good luk! i got pointed in direction of BDEC - a diabetes learning programme where until DAFNE you can learn about how to adjust dosage & balance insulin/carbs. looks v interesting...