Well, just had a visit to my surgery and met the new GP; 38year old, very sure and confident chap. Anyway, I had to go for an unrelated diabetic condition but he said he wanted to chat about my recent diagnosis. I told him I had tried to meet this head on, bought myself a meter and regularly check myself. Told him my average BG over 10 weeks was 5.8 from an initial 11.1 and had lost some 17kgs (which he said was good). However, he said I shouldn’t be on 3 x metformin but the standard issue is 6 per day! I said hopefully when he sees my next blood results he’ll reduce my current dosage. Well, ‘don’t believe the blood meters as we don’t use them anymore and the only result I should be interested in is the 3 month Hba1c test. I agreed but I told him it helps me to identify which foods cause a spike and it gives an indication of where I am and it’s recommended by so many diabetic professionals. ‘They are just not accurate and you’re wasting your money’, and simply dismissed it. He also said that whilst he could see I was trying to deal with my diabetes, I have to listen to the health professionals as they know best.
To be honest, I’m quite flabbergasted......and shall continue doing what I’m doing.
Folks here know I am scared of people. Timid doesn't cover it. But I've stormed out of offices while still loudly proclaiming someone's incompetence for less.Well, just had a visit to my surgery and met the new GP; 38year old, very sure and confident chap. Anyway, I had to go for an unrelated diabetic condition but he said he wanted to chat about my recent diagnosis. I told him I had tried to meet this head on, bought myself a meter and regularly check myself. Told him my average BG over 10 weeks was 5.8 from an initial 11.1 and had lost some 17kgs (which he said was good). However, he said I shouldn’t be on 3 x metformin but the standard issue is 6 per day! I said hopefully when he sees my next blood results he’ll reduce my current dosage. Well, ‘don’t believe the blood meters as we don’t use them anymore and the only result I should be interested in is the 3 month Hba1c test. I agreed but I told him it helps me to identify which foods cause a spike and it gives an indication of where I am and it’s recommended by so many diabetic professionals. ‘They are just not accurate and you’re wasting your money’, and simply dismissed it. He also said that whilst he could see I was trying to deal with my diabetes, I have to listen to the health professionals as they know best.
To be honest, I’m quite flabbergasted......and shall continue doing what I’m doing.
Yeah I get exactly the same from my DN and she has actually said to me that she doesn't know why anyone would prick their fingers when they don't need to and then she continues saying you don't need to do this but I know you will so you should only test blah blah blah ....... I think if it was them who had it they would be more interested in doing the right thing for their body - just like someone who has an allergy/reaction to something - they don't eat it do they. My GP\ couldn't believe I reversed it and actually asked me to tell her exactly how I done it - so they don't know the obvious - although I have to say she mentions it every time I go to her and has even told a trainee who was in the consultation at the time of my success - so they must not have many success stories - on the plus side DN said she would give me a gold star if she had one and it is encouraging my GP does praise me and also comments on how I have kept the weight off (although a little had crept back on). Keep your chin up, you know better than them - we all do don't we and .... keep smiling.Well, just had a visit to my surgery and met the new GP; 38year old, very sure and confident chap. Anyway, I had to go for an unrelated diabetic condition but he said he wanted to chat about my recent diagnosis. I told him I had tried to meet this head on, bought myself a meter and regularly check myself. Told him my average BG over 10 weeks was 5.8 from an initial 11.1 and had lost some 17kgs (which he said was good). However, he said I shouldn’t be on 3 x metformin but the standard issue is 6 per day! I said hopefully when he sees my next blood results he’ll reduce my current dosage. Well, ‘don’t believe the blood meters as we don’t use them anymore and the only result I should be interested in is the 3 month Hba1c test. I agreed but I told him it helps me to identify which foods cause a spike and it gives an indication of where I am and it’s recommended by so many diabetic professionals. ‘They are just not accurate and you’re wasting your money’, and simply dismissed it. He also said that whilst he could see I was trying to deal with my diabetes, I have to listen to the health professionals as they know best.
To be honest, I’m quite flabbergasted......and shall continue doing what I’m doing.
Well, just had a visit to my surgery and met the new GP; 38year old, very sure and confident chap. Anyway, I had to go for an unrelated diabetic condition but he said he wanted to chat about my recent diagnosis. I told him I had tried to meet this head on, bought myself a meter and regularly check myself. Told him my average BG over 10 weeks was 5.8 from an initial 11.1 and had lost some 17kgs (which he said was good). However, he said I shouldn’t be on 3 x metformin but the standard issue is 6 per day! I said hopefully when he sees my next blood results he’ll reduce my current dosage. Well, ‘don’t believe the blood meters as we don’t use them anymore and the only result I should be interested in is the 3 month Hba1c test. I agreed but I told him it helps me to identify which foods cause a spike and it gives an indication of where I am and it’s recommended by so many diabetic professionals. ‘They are just not accurate and you’re wasting your money’, and simply dismissed it. He also said that whilst he could see I was trying to deal with my diabetes, I have to listen to the health professionals as they know best.
To be honest, I’m quite flabbergasted......and shall continue doing what I’m doing.
He also said that whilst he could see I was trying to deal with my diabetes, I have to listen to the health professionals as they know best.
They are just not accurate and you’re wasting your money’,
Keep up the good work with the meter. The GP should understand that the hba1c gives a mean average but the after meal tests tell you useful stuff that helps you get rid of the spikes which ultimately lower the hba1c. If you do go back with a better hba1c and reduced meds ask him how many other of his newly diagnosed type 2s have pulled that trick off. I would hope he is a young dog that can be taught new tricks by his patients.Well, just had a visit to my surgery and met the new GP; 38year old, very sure and confident chap. Anyway, I had to go for an unrelated diabetic condition but he said he wanted to chat about my recent diagnosis. I told him I had tried to meet this head on, bought myself a meter and regularly check myself. Told him my average BG over 10 weeks was 5.8 from an initial 11.1 and had lost some 17kgs (which he said was good). However, he said I shouldn’t be on 3 x metformin but the standard issue is 6 per day! I said hopefully when he sees my next blood results he’ll reduce my current dosage. Well, ‘don’t believe the blood meters as we don’t use them anymore and the only result I should be interested in is the 3 month Hba1c test. I agreed but I told him it helps me to identify which foods cause a spike and it gives an indication of where I am and it’s recommended by so many diabetic professionals. ‘They are just not accurate and you’re wasting your money’, and simply dismissed it. He also said that whilst he could see I was trying to deal with my diabetes, I have to listen to the health professionals as they know best.
To be honest, I’m quite flabbergasted......and shall continue doing what I’m doing.
He could see I was trying to deal with my diabetes, I have to listen to the health professionals as they know best.
To be honest, I’m quite flabbergasted......and shall continue doing what I’m doing.
Brilliant, thnakyou!It's very strange how GPs can vary so much. I, like you I expect, have always felt that knowing there's a problem with a particular food when it happens rather than weight three months.
It doesn't sound as if he's read the NICE guidelines available at https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng28/chapter/1-Recommendations#blood-glucose-management-2. They seem OK with people doing their own monitoring.
1.6.16 If adults with type 2 diabetes are self‑monitoring their blood glucose levels, carry out a structured assessment at least annually. The assessment should include:
If he's so sure doctors know best, he better read them, take him a copy.
- the person's self-monitoring skills
- the quality and frequency of testing
- checking that the person knows how to interpret the blood glucose results and what action to take
- the impact on the person's quality of life
- the continued benefit to the person
the equipment used. [2015]
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