Sorry, but that made me laugh. How quaint and antiquated! And utter nonsense.Morning. I have just had my initial appointment following diagnosis and have been told that I will never come off Metformin and my doses will increase for the rest of my life. Now I know some of you are in remission so I assume that you no longer take any medication? Maybe I’m wrong?
PS: Imagine the looks on their faces when your next check up rolls around and your have normal, non-diabetic numbers? No increase needed?Morning. I have just had my initial appointment following diagnosis and have been told that I will never come off Metformin and my doses will increase for the rest of my life. Now I know some of you are in remission so I assume that you no longer take any medication? Maybe I’m wrong?
Who told you that?Morning. I have just had my initial appointment following diagnosis and have been told that I will never come off Metformin and my doses will increase for the rest of my life. Now I know some of you are in remission so I assume that you no longer take any medication? Maybe I’m wrong?
Because some women who have a hysterectomy still have a cervix, hence still needing smears.My partner was diagnosed a few years back with T2 and was given Metaformin , she never watched her diet and was after about 2 years was taken off it ,her numbers weren’t really that bad I some times wonder what’s going on , A typical example is she is asked to go for a smear test every so often but she doesn’t have a womb how does that work .
As others have said, all depends on what life changes you're willing to make.Morning. I have just had my initial appointment following diagnosis and have been told that I will never come off Metformin and my doses will increase for the rest of my life. Now I know some of you are in remission so I assume that you no longer take any medication? Maybe I’m wrong?
I totally understand but it’s all goneBecause some women who have a hysterectomy still have a cervix, hence still needing smears.
I was put on insulin 2 years ago without being told, while in hospital for something quite different. When I got out, GP after a lot of tense discussion (I refused to continue the insulin) agreed to putting me on metformin. I found this forum, researched and learned a lot, went straight onto keto, BG lowered quickly and I started to phase out the metformin dose slowly and carefully. I was totally off the metformin after about 3 months. These days I am in the non-diabetic range, still keto with occasional forays into VeryLowCarb, 4 clothes sizes smaller as a very welcome side-effect, and happy to eat like this for the rest of my life. So it can be done, isn't all that difficult, but is only one way of handling this illness. Others prefer to continue with meds and have a wider diet. Some of us need extra help from meds. That's okay. We are all different.
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