@Brunneria ... sorry for the astericks ... slip of the tongueNicely put. You can't. The more you learn, the more you disbelieve. LOL.
However, speaking just for myself, we can only go by the resources available, I suppose, and experience, and good advice. More here than in my surgery, I find.
I had a similar experience with the blood pressure, so now I use a home machine and take my blood pressure every morning, same time same place, and keep a record to take to the surgery. My surgery has a blood pressure machine in reception which (a) hurts my arm (2) gives different readings depending how deep your arm is inserted (3) gives mad readings sometimes ... they even give a warning that is the pressure is too high, get it done again by a nurse.And my home machine sometimes plays silly ******* as well ...
I'm treating the whole thing as a warning and a learning experience, and I have never felt better than when I restarted lchf and walking, so all good so far.
Best wishes.
Edited by mod for asterisks
I have only seen this doctor, are there others so convinced?
There are doctors around the world who consider Glucose spikes a hazard in themselves.
I've done that. I've bought a meter of my own too. But there is a never ending supply of different doctors and different nurses arranged by our local practice, so there is a never ending supply of people to argue with once they've revealed they can't be bothered to read the note the GP put on the screen. You might also notice the certainty of NHS staff arguments is usually in reverse proportion to their level of information. The care assistant person who takes the blood is absolutely CERTAIN she must do things on the list (reads blood pressure three times) while the consultant of 25 years will say 'you might think about doing this.'Next time get them to lend you a 24hr recording blood pressure monitor and they will change their minds.
Thanks. I love the vision of the machine in reception. Of course that will never raise anyone's blood pressure, will it?Nicely put. You can't. The more you learn, the more you disbelieve. LOL.
However, speaking just for myself, we can only go by the resources available, I suppose, and experience, and good advice. More here than in my surgery, I find.
I had a similar experience with the blood pressure, so now I use a home machine and take my blood pressure every morning, same time same place, and keep a record to take to the surgery. My surgery has a blood pressure machine in reception which (a) hurts my arm (2) gives different readings depending how deep your arm is inserted (3) gives mad readings sometimes ... they even give a warning that is the pressure is too high, get it done again by a nurse.And my home machine sometimes plays silly ******* as well ...
I'm treating the whole thing as a warning and a learning experience, and I have never felt better than when I restarted lchf and walking, so all good so far.
Best wishes.
Edited by mod for asterisks
Humans are hugely variable and complicated and all sorts of things can affect blood sugar levels. Including stressing about blood sugar levels!OK I’m now beginning to think this is the stuff I could do with understanding a lot better. When I do bg tests during the day they can be all sorts - for instance this morning, after some light exercise and before I’d eaten anything it was 9.6. When I’d tested when I woke up it was 6.4. Now my routines haven’t changed and those routines led to a good HbA1c, but clearly I’m having spikes. Why are spikes a bad thing if my average is good? Why am I even having them? Is this something to do with the “severity” of my condition?
Maybe there are threads on the forum someone could steer me to to better understand spikes?
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