jonathan183
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 372
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
I agree with you that restricting levels to under 6mmol/l at all times is unnecessarily restrictive.
If you use google to find Libre graphs for people without diabetes, you will see their levels are not flat and can rise to 9 or 10. The difference is that their levels will fall back to "normal" numbers pretty quickly.
It is prolonged high levels that cause complications rather than a spike that come back down.
This page (https://www.diabetes.co.uk/diabetes_care/blood-sugar-level-ranges.html) provides recommended target ranges, You will see these are higher than 6mmol/l
It is prolonged high levels that cause complications rather than a spike that come back down.
she is underweight.
Has she ever been actually diagnosed as diabetic by a GP?Dear all,
Thank you so much for your replies. I'm really in such a difficult position, my wife is so fixed in her beliefs that she has to do this extreme diet, she will not listen to anyone who suggests she needs to eat more.
Every time I try to encourage her to eat more, she viciously accuses me of being an unsupportive husband and wanting her to reach diagnostic levels. I believe she suffers from "confirmation bias" - even when reading this thread where many replies suggest she has an eating disorder etc. she will only see the answers that support her beliefs, and will completely reject all the ones that suggest she has an eating disorder.
In response to the questions about whether any medical professional has recommended this diet - the answer is simply no. She is entirely self-diagnosed, and has no trust in doctors.
She is under the care of an NHS Mental health nurse, but unfortunately rejects any suggestion that this is an eating disorder mental health issue, and is refusing all counselling etc.
I'm genuinely at my wits end. E.g. this morning despite a FBS of just 4.0, she is has only eaten a single chicken thigh, and cup of tea for breakfast, and is refusing to eat anything else all day. She is now underweight and visibly extremely thing.
Just wondering if anyone else has experienced a loved one (in my view) completely over doing what is needed to control diabetes? (to the point where is dangerous for them) I imagine it's far more common for tension caused by people not taking diabetes seriously enough!!!
Super thanks for any input, I feel very lonely in this situation.
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