Agreed. If you get your sugars back to normal ranges, were to be considered no longer at any increased risk than the average Joe, then how does one explain the 50% risk women who have had gestational diabetes have of developing T2 within 20 years of the pregnancy?
Off the register is effectively a policy decision: you will no longer be offered routine screenings. In times of NHS austerity, this may seem like an effective approach to managing costs by your GP (especially if your GP is of the school of thought that believes that diabetes is a progressive disease).
The term remission infers that it is still there, but you are doing a stellar job of keeping it under control through dietary measures. If you manage remission for the rest of your life, then you could be considered cured. But this is a determination that could only be made retrospectively after one's death.
If you haven't already, check out the work of the late Dr. Joseph Kraft. Here is a link to Ivor Cummins'
@FatEmperor 's blog on Dr. Kraft and his work:
http://www.thefatemperor.com/blog/2...ork-on-type-2-diabetes-insulin-reigns-disease