xyzzy said:Grazer said:And let's remember that the biggest challenge we have with most new type 2's is in STOPPING them from eating bread, sugar, bakery products and so on. Let's not give them an excuse to eat those things everytime they THINK their blood sugar is going too low, because maybe they're not used to lower more normal BGs, when for the vast majority getting out of double figures is the first challenge.
Yes I agree Grazer, apart from the distinction that an insulin induced hypo is life threatening and normally having "low blood sugars" isn't that's the other thing that makes me angry in all of this, the damage it can do to the newly diagnosed.
I completely agree. There is never an excuse for a jelly baby to pass a non-insulin-dependant diabetic's lips :lol:
The other thing that really makes me angry is the advice that insulin-users get on correcting 'hypos'. The medical world builds in a huge margin of error to 4. New insulin users quite naturally build in their own margin (not knowing that a huge margin has already been built in) and often start correcting the moment they fall into the high 4s or low 5s. The advice is then to take 10g quick acting carb e.g. orange juice, coca cola etc, followed by 15g slow-acting carb e.g a sandwich. By the time you've eaten 25g or more of carb with no insulin, your BG is sky high and you spend the day on a high/low roller coaster. The advice should be tailored to the individual and based on their body weight. Smaller people need less carb to raise blood sugars. At the very least, we should be advised to take very small amounts of carb and test frequently. 1 jelly baby will raise my BG by 2.5 or 3 (sometimes more) within less than 10 minutes. It contains 6g pure glucose.
Sorry if that's a bit ranty, but I get so frustrated with this issue!
Smidge