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hi newbie

lyn hathawy

Active Member
Messages
38
hi i joined the group just over two weeks ago after been diagnosed with t2.
i was placed on metformin now up to 3 a day and diet but waitin to do an educational course with diabetes team 2 days in march.
what should i do about testing my blood pn never told me what my bloods were or never said anything about testing .it just seems a long time another month before i see the diabetes team any advice would be greatly appreciated
 
Hi Lyn and welcome to the forum Unfortunately many diabetes teams will tell you it's not necessary to test but it is. Maybe they will discuss this on your next visit. It's very important to see what effects certain foods have on your levels, so you can choose the best things for you to eat. You can't go by what other people say as it's different for everybody. In this information for new members you will find details on how to test plus a lot of other information that will be useful to you. Ask as many questions you like as there is usually someone who can answer.

 
1. Ignore any Health Care Professional that tells you that you shouldn't test*
2. Do some research and find out which meter has the cheapest strips (I buy my strips in bulk from ebay). It shouldn't cost you more than about 20p per test.
2. Buy the meter that has the cheapest strips.
3. Start testing your BG when you first wake up in the morning (this is your fasting number).
4. Test before you eat each meal.
5. Test 2 hours after you eat each meal.

(*make a mental note of who they are so that you can rub their noses in it after you get your diabetes under control)l

That might sound like a lot of testing, but you need to understand how your body is reacting to different foods (and mainly to carbohydrates).

The eventual aim is that your 2 hour BG reading will be less than 7.8 mmol/l. It'll probably be a bit of a struggle to get there at first but you'll get there in the end.

Carbohydrate turns to sugar in your blood. Workout the carbohydrate content of anything you eat. Cut out any obvious sources of carbs (especially bread, pasta, rice, potatoes and stuff with flour or sugar in it).

Exactly how much carb you can tolerate depends on the condition of your endocrine system. Some of do well on 150g of carbs a day, some eat as few as 50g. It isn't easy in the beginning, but you'll feel so much better within the first few weeks that it gets much, much easier.

Good luck. We're here for you.

Stephen
 
Excellent advice borofergie.

All I would add is to try and cut your carbohydrate down as low as possible to start with. It seems a bit extreme but it will get you blood sugar levels down as quickly as possible. Think of this as a detox period if that helps. Once you have good control you can gradually try out new foods to see what works for you.

It is important to keep you sugar levels below 7.8 after two hours. 7.8 is the value that most research says that diabetic complications can begin from. Some of us aim for even lower than that so that we try and keep in the range of a non diabetic person at all times.

It's the starchy carbohydrates that do the damage regardless of what any NHS nurse or dietitian tells you. The starchy carbohydrates advice was invented in the 1980's and hasn't been updated in this country since. In more advanced countries such as Sweden you would be recommended to change your diet to exactly how borofergie is suggesting and the NHS starchy diet is positively discouraged.

When you work out how much carbohydrate a food has you will find the value on the side of the packet in very small writing. Include the total count and not the just the "from sugars" count.

For fresh foods that don't have labels you can use web sites like these to get a carbohydrate count

http://www.carbohydrate-counter.org/advsearch.php

or

http://fatsecret.com/

Using borofergie's (and others) method and the testing regime he outlined I have reduced my BS levels to between 4.5 and 6.5 for 99% of all readings. I eat around 75g of carbs / day having gradually increased from around 40g / day from the start. I started 8 weeks ago with sugar levels in the 20's. I now feel far better and importantly back in control of my life.

You will undoubtedly find that the amount of carbohydrate you can eat will be different to me.
 
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