Hi, I was diagnosed type 2 diabetic in March after a few years of pre diabetes. I was told to diet control and go back in a year for next HBA1c. I am very obese, have an underactive thyroid, high blood pressure and reflux disease -All medicated. I was told I didn't need to test even though I said I was concerned that I needed to know what certain foods were affecting me in what way. I have lost 22lb since diagnosis but now the weight loss seems to have just stopped. I had an appointment with a surgeon for gallstones who said he wouldn't remove the gallbladder as symptoms weren't bad and he wouldn't want to anesthetise but then wrote to my doctor suggesting referral for bariatric surgery, which I don't want to have. I have now got to wait until Friday for a conversation with my GP about medication to help with weight loss i.e metformin or orlistat. Feeling rather confused, and unsupported. Should I be testing?
Hi
@vanrose66 .
Congratulations on the weight loss so far, no small feat.....bravo
@EllieM make great points .
Many liken it to a SPEEDOMETER in the car .
You could drive without it working, and just wait for the fines to roll in to see what damage (financially) that decision had cost you.
Same with testing.
You 'could' ignore it and see what damage that costs to your health, over the intervening time at your next 3/6/12 months HBA1c test.
And THEN look back over the period concerned to try & identify the foods you no longer tolerate so well .....(good luck with THAT )
OR
Check on the day, and slowly lower or eliminate the offending foods, AS you discover them.
Two simple tools (Speedo + testing )
One most of us who know the potential cost, choose when driving .
The other, (testing) many of us aware of the damage NOT testing can cost us, choose once diagnosed with Type 2
doctors say to ignore testing as
A. It cost the NHS to prescribe it
B. Some (& I'd suggest doctors think 'all') type 2's find testing anxiety inducing.
The sad truth is the data suggests T2D is a progressive disease, and type 2's get complications as the years progress.
Data, Likely driven by the fact fewer were aware of the damage carbs 'Can' coat us, and historically fewer of those suffering type 2 were doing a low carb or keto diet.
So stats, as well all know, can prove anything, and if the data is wrong or input correctly can seriously present a false narrative
I do believe data from the last few years, will prove overwhelmingly, it is not as inexorably progressive as previous data suggests & can be slowed to a large degree.
And personally, even though we all slip up + fall off the LC wagon at times, everything we do in just 'TRYING' to lower our carb input, WILL have a positive effect on our current AND future health.
Which, judging by the ones, like me & now yourself, who trouble to look for forums like this to offer advice & help,
We consider the effort & time involved justified, because, to paraphrase the advert ...."We're worth it".
I certainly think we ALL are worthy of ANY attempts we can make, to improve our health, particularly if it involves simply amending our diets
Good luck on your journey