"[...] cut out virtually all of my sweets treats but I admit a couple remain."
Cut out the rest of the sweet treats and only have one rarely.
I'd need to see what you eat before commenting but it looks like you are very insulin resistant (like me) and that's why insulin medication does not work.
Cut out
all root vegetables, rice, pasta and bread, breakfast cereals, mangoes, apples, bananas, melons and other high carb fruits.
What does that leave?
Leafy greens such as lettuce, broccoli, cabbage. spring greens (collards)
Courgettes, cucumber, mushrooms, tomatoes (not too much of them), celery
Raspberries, blackberries and blueberries (not too much of them).
Replace milk with zero carb soya milk (not the reduced version). It may take some time to get used to. If you can handle fats then double cream and moist cheeses are ok except the ones with additions that up the carbs.
The above list is not exhaustive but if you stick to low carb alternatives then your bgs will go down, it might take some time.
When checking out food for carb content, ignore the sugar content and go for net carbs. Net carbs is total carbs less fibre, here is an example.
Nutrition Facts
For 100 grams of broccoli
[th]
Nutrient
[/th]
[th width="6em"]
Value
[/th][th width="6em"]
%DV
[/th]
[th]
Calories
[/th]
[td]
34
[/td][td]
[/td]
[th]
Fats
[/th]
[td]
0.4g
[/td][td]
0.5%
[/td]
[th]
Saturated fats
[/th]
[td]
0g
[/td][td]
0.2%
[/td]
[th]
Trans fats
[/th]
[td]
–
[/td][td]
[/td]
[th]
Cholesterol
[/th]
[td]
0mg
[/td][td]
0%
[/td]
[th]
Sodium
[/th]
[td]
33mg
[/td][td]
1%
[/td]
[th]
Carbs
[/th]
[td]
7g
[/td][td]
2%
[/td]
[th]
Net carbs
[/th]
[td]
4g
[/td][td]
[/td]
[th]
Fiber
[/th]
[td]
3g
[/td][td]
9%
[/td]
So here broccoli has 4g of net carbs per 100g or 4% which is low and a good one to eat.
If you want to search for low carb food google "[name of food] net carbs per 100g"
Eg "brocoli net carbs per 100g"
For more information and help go to the Low Carb Forum
A forum for discussing and learning more about low carb diets. There may be people trying low carb for the first time, so please be compassionate.
www.diabetes.co.uk