Hi
@Stepsstu and welcome to the forums.
I'm guessing that you are currently on metformin? That tends to be the first drug that GPs put new T2s on unless they have hba1c much higher than yours.
An hba1c of 76mmol/mol corresponds to an average blood sugar over 3 months of 11.9mmol/L.
Hopefully the metformin will bring it down a bit but I suspect that metformin alone may not be enough.
Did your team give you any information about diet with the diagnosis? A lot of the T2s here reduce their levels by reducing the carbs in their diet. (Note if metformin is not the drug you are on you may need to be slightly careful about reducing carbs).
The keynote thing is because glucometers are often used by T1s who can get a condition called diabetic ketoacidosis if their blood sugars go too high and there is not enough insulin in their systems. So they are advised to test for "ketones" once their blood sugars get into the teens. This is very unlikely to apply to you as a T2 since T2s tend to have insulin resistance and produce lots of insulin, at least early in diagnosis.
Find out about diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), including what the symptoms are, when to get medical help and how to prevent it.
I am concerned that you haven't seen your team at all. With levels so high I would want to talk to and see someone but I'll leave it to the UK T2s to advise on who the best person to contact is.
My team I have never meet they have never seen me in person and everytime I now test it says keynote on the meter, I had a sample taken 2 weeks ago for this.
Was this a blood test? Do you know if they tested for ketones or whether they were doing a more complicated test? What was the result?
I'll stop for now before I overwhelm you with a wall of text.
Once more welcome.