Hi Penfold,you are quiet right "Moniter" bs's or we would never know what foods spike our bs's the Great DrRichard Bernstein explains the consequences for diabetics... Of just small rises over 2.5 mmolsI was told no testing was needed by GP on diagnosis, but when I saw the nurse she said I could have a testing kit and gave me the Nexus one. Going through the strips so eager to get on prescriptions!
At Docs on Friday and am going to ask, it seems to say you can have them as a guide to self management ... Surely that's what I'm doing if testing before/after meals to understand what gives me spikes?
Unfortunately there appears to be some medical professionals who consider that Type 2s should not be testing their own BS levels. Perhaps they are concerned that if they suggest it then we will ask them to prescribe them which will prove expensive. However I consider testing to be an integral part of self management of my diabetes - yes I do have 6 monthly checks (although they forgot to test my hba1c for my last one so it was essentially a waste of time) but that only gives me the overall picture not what I can or cannot eat on a daily basis - so my answers to the questions "why do you test?" or "why do you want to make your fingers sore" are generally "because I want to maintain/manage the good control that I have over my diabetes"Saw Doc today, 6 weeks after diagnosis. Told,her I was testing, she raised her eyebrows ... I'm ignoring her
Stupid doctor. How can you control your BG level without knowing what it is.Saw Doc today, 6 weeks after diagnosis. Told her I was testing, she raised her eyebrows ... I'm ignoring her
Had same experience, blood sugars at diagnosis was 32 ! Worked hard over 2 years to get off metformin and glicozide. Got hba1c to 6.3 and new nurse said as I was back to reasonable level I couldn't have strips. She even asked if I was eating normally!! I buy my strips £27 for 50 and test once a week. I also am only called in once a year now.I worked hard to get my own Blood Glucose levels down and under control only to be told that I needn't bother to test anymore and that the test strips would not be available to me (I'm Type 2) on the NHS.
Unfortunately they are far to expensive to buy outright so I'm simply forced by the NHS to give up testing altogether.
The irony of this policy is that careful B/G monitoring saves the NHS money in the long term and if I were to let thing go out of control I would get my FREE B/G test strips and cost the NHS much more.
Seems to me like the lunatics have finally taken over the Asylum.
You know what, we are the diabetics and we know our bodies the best, why do they not understand that we do have to test, my doctor is ok with me testing now because I explained to him last time I saw him that if I didn't test not only would I not know what I was eating was ok for me or not, and if I could not test anymore then I would be stressed to the limit, I think I can speak for everyone else here.Saw Doc today, 6 weeks after diagnosis. Told her I was testing, she raised her eyebrows ... I'm ignoring her
I would think that with the vast cuts to the health budget recently it would be frowned upon even more. However, as no-one can stop us doing anything legal in our own homes I would suggest that we can still test if we buy the strips ourselves. This of course touches upon the subject of the poorest and most needy people being the last ones to get help? Oh and PS, for your own use, keep a record of your results.I'm allowed to test at my own expense if I do it as a Hobby. (According to our practice diabetic doctor!) My own doctor did at least admit after giving me some test strips when he saw my results, and then later refused when asked for, that the powers that be wouldn't allow prescriptions to type 2 diabetics - so at least he was honest.
I believe I've read somewhere that there was actually a petition requesting supply of meters and test strips to us - but this was before my time on the forum, so have no more information on this. I assume it must have been vetoed/ignored since it's still an ongoing issue...
Robbity
Time to change doctor: BangheadMy Dn actually shouted at me for testing. 'Who told you to tesst? Where did you get the meter?' All because I questioned her judgement. I rarely have BS under 12. Yet my hba1c is 7. So therefore I must be having a fair few lows too and as I understand it its the spikes that do the damage. My DN says this is me 'panicking' and I dont need treatment yet and to carry on wolfing carbs as per the eatwell plate. 'This is why you shouldnt test' she says :/
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