I really don't know or understand what I can and can't eat. (Newly diagnosed last month, but without actually clarity of what Type I have, Doctors described me as an anomaly)
Been told to avoid sugars, cut out fruit, avoid sweeteners, reduce the carbs, paying attention to carbs which sugar.
But I don't understand what that leaves me with.
I really don't like fish, and I'm a shift worker with very little time to pre-cook food or make things at work.
I'm struggling massively with breakfast suggestions especially on the days when I am at work.
I'm hungry all of the time and just can't get my head around anything at all.
I've read websites, and trawled through this forum, but I still feel at a loss.
Help (please)
Its hard not to feel overwhelmed at first, the likelihood is that you feel really hungry because of the amount of carbohydrates you have been eating ( toast, cereals, ricse , spaghetti, many processed foods, and sweet thins) they all make you appetite worse. When you stop eating them and replace it with real foods your hunger pangs should go down.
It leaves you with ton of stuff, bacon, eggs, meats of all types, cheese, cream butter avocados, nuts , seeds, green vegetables .
basically almost any type of properly fresh instead of processed foods should be ok to eat. Look at the low carb program on here to get some ideas. My builders bring along salads and happily munch them.! boiled eggs and avocados work really well and easy to store.
I had a few blood tests over the last few weeks that they said would help determine the type, but there was some issues with the blood taken and I've had to have them redone.
They're saying I'm an anomaly because of the factors involved. They're saying my age makes me unusual to develop type 2 (I'm 28) but the glucose levels don't appear to be high enough to be type 1.
I've been put on Metformin to start with and they are quite open that I may have to change treatments.
Although, I've not been told about self testing, I don't have a meter and not sure what I'm meant to do about it all.
Hi and welcome,
Please contact your surgery and ask for print outs of your test results. You absolutely need to know which tests you had and what all the different results were. This is important. Doctors are fond of saying they are "high", or "OK", or "fine", but the actual figures are essential to know. It isn't just the glucose tests but also the other tests they throw in, such as cholesterol, lipids, liver & kidney functions etc. These are all important for diabetics. (If you are in England you can also ask if your surgery puts test results on line as they are supposed to do, and how to register for this). Please don't accept anything less than the full information.
If you get these print outs and post the results on here, we can help you understand them.
You do need a self testing meter, and if your doctor doesn't prescribe one for you then you need to buy your own as most of us Type 2s have to. They are essential, but wait and see if your doctor gives you one first. If he doesn't, (and he may well tell you testing isn't advised - ignore him) then we can point you in the direction of some meters.
You already eat salads - so swap the pasta and rice for something else on them. Eggs are excellent, along with cherry toms, avocado, cold meats such as chicken legs, ham, whatever. Vegetables such as broccoli, mushrooms, cauliflower, kale. Use olive ouil and real mayonnaise for dressings on salads, avoid flour based sauces. Have a look at https://www.dietdoctor.com/low-carb/60-seconds where you will find food suggestions and recipes.
Ask as many questions as you like.
I developed type 2 when I was 29/30... it was hard to get my head around the diet at first and could be a little depressing, but now that I have it down pat it's brilliant. I feel better too. Lots of info on here, my main advice would be to buy a test kit (cheap one is the code free) and test before and then hourly after eating to see how each food affects you personally, I would keep a diary too. This way you know what you can and can't eat... some people can tolerate food others can't so just saying a list isn't that helpful to you. We can start you off but it is your adventure and where it takes you will be different to where it takes someone else.Hey @Juicyj
Thanks for the reply/
It was picked up by my GP, I was experiencing a numb foot and she wanted to rule out diabetes as the cause, and ended up ruling it in. I had Meningitis and Septeceamia in 2015, and had originally thought the numb foot was a result of that, but sadly not.
I had a few blood tests over the last few weeks that they said would help determine the type, but there was some issues with the blood taken and I've had to have them redone.
They're saying I'm an anomaly because of the factors involved. They're saying my age makes me unusual to develop type 2 (I'm 28) but the glucose levels don't appear to be high enough to be type 1.
I've been put on Metformin to start with and they are quite open that I may have to change treatments.
Although, I've not been told about self testing, I don't have a meter and not sure what I'm meant to do about it all.
I've got an appointment next week with a GP that specialises in Diabetes, and I'm hoping that'll give me more clarity.
As for the food, I lived off of rice, pasta, fruit and vegetables. Usually rice and pasta salads etc
I followed Slimming World for a long time, and would do their Overnight oats for breakfast (porridge oats, yogurt with fruit)
http://www.diabetes.co.uk/blood-glucose-meters/sd-codefree-blood-glucose-meter.htmlThank you...
So my lack of knowledge comes to play again, when you say about the test kit, what do you mean by code free?
There is no obligation for GP practises to show patients blood test results online or even give printouts. I am signed up with Patient Access but was told by my surgery I would only be able to order repeat prescriptions and make appointments at the moment as they do not put blood test results or records online yet. I can get a blood result printout if I want it but they charge 20p for oneif your surgery puts test results on line as they are supposed to do,
There is no obligation for GP practises to show patients blood test results online or even give printouts. I am signed up with Patient Access but was told by my surgery I would only be able to order repeat prescriptions and make appointments at the moment as they do not put blood test results or records online yet. I can get a blood result printout if I want it but they charge 20p for one
http://www.nhs.uk/NHSEngland/AboutNHSservices/doctors/Pages/gp-online-services.aspx
from that page
"
Sign up to GP online services and you'll be able to use a website or app to:
The service is free and available to everyone who is registered with a GP."
- book or cancel appointments online with a GP or nurse
- order repeat prescriptions online
- view parts of your GP record, including information about medication, allergies, vaccinations, previous illnesses and test results
- view clinical correspondence such as hospital discharge summaries, outpatient appointment letters and referral letters
That web site also says ...
Do all GP practices offer the same online services?
The services available to you will depend on the online system your GP practice uses.
.
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