You are very unlikely to succeed in getting a meter and strips from the NHS. However you can get a free TEE2 meter from Spirit HealthcareHi everyone, this is my first post here. I'm not even sure if I am posting to the right place, my apologies if this should be posted somewhere else.
My GP diagnosed me with type 2 diabetes in June 2016. This was via a HbA1c blood test which came back as 50. 12 months before in June 2015 my HbA1c was 33. I had gone to the GP with symptoms of mood swings and hair loss. I had no symptoms of diabetes and did not even know that the GP had tested for it. The surgery nurse gave me the results, she gave me some written information about type 2 diabetes, gave me some advice about healthy eating, booked me onto a diabetes education course and for eye and foot screening. She did give me another appointment for about 4 weeks' time so when I went back I had some questions, but the answers I got were rather vague, and she was trying to get me to start medication which I refused. Since then I went on a strict diet and lost 3 stone. 3 months after the initial diagnosis my HbA1c was retested with a result of 39. I have had 2 further tests since then and the result both times was 36.
At no stage have I ever been offered equipment to test my blood sugars, in fact the GP and the nurse both said I would not need to do that and a 6 monthly or even yearly blood test for HbA1c levels was sufficient.
But everything I read about diabetes seems to emphasise that it is the spikes in blood sugar levels that cause damage. So how do I know whether my blood sugar levels are going too high after a meal? Should I be insisting that I want a monitor and testing strips - and do I have the right to insist on this?
I asked to be referred to a dietitian - this took 9 months, I had one appointment 7 months ago with a student dietitian and that was it, I've heard no more since. She was useless, didn't tell me anything more than the little I had already been told.
I still eat more healthily than I did before the diagnosis, but I admit that I am eating biscuits pretty much every day now (malted milk or rich tea normally as they are low in sugar) and I do sometimes eat other things that are higher in sugars too. I still find it really hard to accept that this is going to be for the rest of my life, and that even the small amount of bad foods I do eat could be causing long-term damage.
Any help or advice would be very welcome.
Hello and welcome,
The HbA1c is an average. It does not show the roller coaster swings from high to low that cause the damage. The variability is important. Two people can have an identical excellent HbA1c, but one can be "flat" most of the time, and the other up and down.
The only way to see where you fit is to test before and after eating and see what happens to your levels.
http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/40/8/994
http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/thr...ed-with-alzheimers-in-type-2-diabetes.125081/
Yes, that is what I am worried about. All I get told by the GP and the surgery nurse is that my HbA1c level shows I have "excellent control". But as you say it is an average. I have never even had the blood test that gives the results as a single figure like 7 or 8 as I have seen mentioned on here. I just get told that it is not necessary and it would only give a reading of what my blood sugars are at that precise time, whereas the HbA1c gives a longer term figure. But I just think surely they should check (or I should check if they won't) whether I have large spikes so I can try and change if that is the case.
Thank you all for your helpful comments and advice.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?