I always turn up at my diabetes appointments, only missed the diabetes clinic, once because of illness, as I want to know what's going on, if I have any questions or moans, weight gets checked, blood pressure, urine gets tested too. So it's a must for me, thumbs up.
RRB
Me too, trip to clinic for a red-letter day! Everyone is purposeful and supportive. I wouldn't miss it. I've always found clinics to be like that, and was shocked to read of
@yingtong's experiences in '64. I was diagnosed in '85, so the regime was still old-school, but I had a peaceful 6 or so hours in clinic, quietly weeping with relief that something WAS wrong with me and WOULD be sorted out, followed by daily visits at home for a few days from a nurse who seemed to know about as much as me (not much) about diabetes. I was not unhappy, I was glad to have the means (insulin) of not feeling like death any more.
So between '64 and '85, there must have been a sea-change and a change of 'policy', a realisation that they shouldn't knock the newly-diagnosed over the head with scare-tactics. Perhaps they realised they wouldn't like it themselves, when they thought about it!


I've been given, not one, but three Dafne courses ! - I'm a slow learner where diabetes is concerned, I think I just can't believe that such a strange illness can exist! I found the classes good, but I couldn't keep up with the other 'students'/patients. The classes were for about 12 people. I needed more individual help, particularly with programming my meter, and carb-counting, and, in the day, we didn't really get on to testing for correct bolus and basal doses, your dose was decided by your doctor!
@Emmotha, I'm not surprised you feel outraged, because there's so much still not right. I share those feelings. With the benefit of age, though (!), I look back and see that we've come a long way, and that this Forum is going to increase the speed of progress and act as a catalyst to the NHS diabetes provision. (What else can we do? We diabetics are a pretty silent bunch! Why??). There's fantastic diabetes research going on around the world, but there are still the haves and the have-nots: people with diabetes in countries and war-zones where even the most basic health care is still not available.