Hi Richard and welcome.I had what I call my yearly mot blood test results and had a call from my GP surgery to say that my blood sugar level was 58 mol, I was asked to repeat it 2 weeks later and it came back as 60 mol, I was informed that as I have had 2 high results I'm diabetic, my GP wants to try and reverse it with diet first rather than going straight on to Metformin, so I have been sent on a mydesmond course, 1st of 2 3 hour courses this week Thu, has anyone else been on one of these courses, what is discussed and how did you find it?
Thanks
Richard
Oh good grief.The venue (an NHS health centre) also provided tea and coffee with sugar (no sweeteners available) and huge plates of biscuits.
I had a call today from the facilitators of the mydesmond course, they said to take any drinks and snacks i may need as they are not allowed to provide anything, so maybe they have learnt from previous experiences, i work in social care and one of our ladies was diagnosed pre diabetic, we cut her carb intake and she is now in normal range, so I guess I can learn from that, my main concern is that I know when things get stressed at work I can reach for something sweet like biscuits or chocolate, i also brought it to a team meeting that I noticed that colleague's were grabbing biscuits in between tasks, as it's sometimes crazy busy and that's a quick easy option.Hi Richard and welcome.
I went on a similar course (different name, same idea) just after diagnosis. I think I was lucky. There was a traditional Diabetic Nurse (who had never heard of Dawn Phenomenon) giving out the eatwell plate advice to newly diagnosed T2s - "eat plenty of starchy carbohydrates and limit meat dairy and fat" but for balance there was also an NHS dietitian who was a low-carb enthusiast. The obvious problem was that both were in the room at the same time saying completely different things - for example - DN: "carbohydrates are essential in the diet" - dietitian - "no, we can happily live without any carbohydrates whatsoever".
I'd guess two thirds of the group was more confused after the course than before. The third that wasn't had informed themselves on low-carb before the course. There was also substantial drop-out as the course went on. I stuck it out but some of it was really basic stuff - I suppose they have to start by assuming zero knowledge; some a bit misleading - eg the course used "normal" (as in "normal blood pressure") meaning "normal for diabetics", not for the non-diabetic population, leading to a bit of confusion. They did cover meters and testing but DN's view was that "T2s don't need to test anyway so it is an expense you can avoid".
The venue (an NHS health centre) also provided tea and coffee with sugar (no sweeteners available) and huge plates of biscuits.
Evidence from people on here indicates that the courses are a bit of a mixed bag and it depends entirely on who is running them in your area. I would still give it a go.
That's really encouraging. Best of luck, and please let us know how it goes.I had a call today from the facilitators of the mydesmond course, they said to take any drinks and snacks i may need as they are not allowed to provide anything, so maybe they have learnt from previous experiences, i work in social care and one of our ladies was diagnosed pre diabetic, we cut her carb intake and she is now in normal range, so I guess I can learn from that, my main concern is that I know when things get stressed at work I can reach for something sweet like biscuits or chocolate, i also brought it to a team meeting that I noticed that colleague's were grabbing biscuits in between tasks, as it's sometimes crazy busy and that's a quick easy option.
I have tried having overnight oats with low fat Greek yoghurt and mixed berries, but having read the comments to my post wonder if this is a good option, thanks to you who have responded to me, and I agree it's better to discuss with people going through the same thing, as to how they coped with certain things as they crop up.
Most of the people on the course were diagnosed from just a few weeks ago to a couple of years, most found out through routine blood tests, 1 found out after a stroke and 1 while in hospital following a seizure .That's really encouraging. Best of luck, and please let us know how it goes.
PS - That's a good spot about work. My last years in employment (happily retired) were madly busy and there was always cakes, biscuits and sweets around. Haribo is the devil. Plus my employer was all-in on Eatwell and loads of carbs in the canteen.
Oats don't feature in my eating these days - just far too many carbs for me. I used to love porridge - you get the picture.
Short answer is that I would advise you to get your doc's opinion on that, and a referral to a specialist if necessary. We can't diagnose on here. I do have the experience of a lot of inflammation-related things while running high bgs - gout, muscle aches etc - but just because they happen at the same time doen't mean that one causes the other.Most of the people on the course were diagnosed from just a few weeks ago to a couple of years, most found out through routine blood tests, 1 found out after a stroke and 1 while in hospital following a seizure .
One thing that surprised me was 2 of the people are T2 but on insulin, i thought that was only for T1, so as the saying goes you learn something new everyday, I mentioned this forum as a great place to get advice from people who are on the same journey, and that it's especially great for newbies to get advice, so hopefully some will download the app.
One question I didn't get to ask but could ask my GP next week is the blood test raised that I have inflammation of my liver, GP not sure what is going on, I've had a scan done and been told to stop my statins which I've been on a few years now, could inflammation of the liver cause diabetes or diabetes cause inflammation?
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