I think I mean in remission or reversed my diagnosis...x
OK. I'll pick up the hot potato then.
My medical records now show "Diabetes Resolved".
I have never, not once, not ever, had an OGTT, and I wouldn't voluntarily join a queue to do it now. It has never been suggested by a medic and relative to my lifestyle, it'd be like a body-battering. I'll pass thanks.
Whilst discussing my lipids with my GP I asked at what point the recurring recommendation for a statin would take into account my repeated non-diabetic range HbA1cs, as the T2 flag was influencing the Medic's view on my risk. She responded by asking if I'd like to come off the diabetic register.
At that point I asked which criteria was she using to make that offer. Her response was my serial HbA1cs, so far away from even the pre-diabetes diagnostic threshold, and the absence of any other concerning assessment metrics. In other words, as yet, such an assessment is a discretionary matter, and will quite probably be coloured by the consulting Medic's belief of whether reversal/remission/resolved/cured is indeed a possibility or not.
I had previously asked Professor Taylor the criteria he used for his trialists, post-ND, to decide if they had reversed, according to the trial criteria. His response was HbA1c.
Personally, my numbers mean a great deal to me, but the tag of resolved, or whatever, is meaningless. Again, personally, whatever a Medic felt, I personally, would never contemplate myself being resolved (or whatever), if I had diabetic levels in any of the published criteria. You may say that is somewhat hypocritical if I haven't undertaken an OGTT, but to me it would feel like self-harming. Had my GP wanted me to have an OGTT, I'd still be on the register.
So, Debs, my response to you would be, you decide for yourself at which point you would consider yourself to have reached the place you describe as "better". I would also urge you to resist from driving yourself to a point of distraction to tick a box you are unable to sustain. Dieting isn't the only sport where yo-yoing can be harmful. I would urge you to find a steady path on your way because maintenance, in my view, is the same challenge, if not a greater challenge than crossing a line in the sand. The thing about boom and bust is the busts tend to be somewhat bigger than the booms.
Good luck with it Debs, but be gentle with your body. You only have the one, and I don't have any spares to offer you.
