In a word - YES. These are the current guidance given to HCP's, Any doctor not following this mantra risks legal challenge if anything goes wrong.I work in the fitness industry, have a keen interest in nutrition & am currently doing an Obesity & Diabetes course.My mother was diagnosed with type 2 last year & I am stunned at the advice her diabetic nurse has given her.........do not self test (we don't want you to be worried), no food is off limits & you must eat starchy carbs with every meal. As far as my mother is concerned I know nothing, & if she refuses to listen then c'est la vie, but is this NHS advice normal across the U.K.?
Sadly it is. Tell your mother that when I was diagnosed a couple of years ago I spent several months getting absolutely nowhere doing what I was told on the "Desmond" day. I am a slim (very untypical) T2 and my glucose was very high at diagnosis. I just went for my free NHS check up, I had no symptoms at all and thought I was very healthy, if I hadn't researched things for myself I might well have had a stroke or heart attack by now.
Tell her to read up on Professor Roy Taylor's research. Brilliant man.
Good question!If the NHS advice is top notch why is there a T2D epidemic and they are spending £10b on dealing with diabetes and it's complications? Surely if their advice was correct they'd be spending less, especially on dealing with complications??
If the NHS advice is top notch why is there a T2D epidemic and they are spending £10b on dealing with diabetes and it's complications? Surely if their advice was correct they'd be spending less, especially on dealing with complications??
Could you buy her a codefree meter and strips then ask her to prove to you her NHS way is working with a series of tests?
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