I think that the UK feels behind the USA when it comes to knowledge of diabetes at the GP level. I'm sure you are right about the requirement for further testing but the reality is the NHS won't even fund testing strips for Type 2s. In terms of current BGs, I have had a bad summer. One morning I recorded a 32.2 (and I live by myself). For two months it didn't go below 10-13. I seem to have recently stablised around 8 and 9. The consultant is putting me under a dietician as I admitted to sugar binging which I have done since childhood. About once a week I simply cannot hold the sugar cravings at bay and fall off the wagon. I describe it as a biological imperative rather than standard greed - I just have to have the sweet (does that make sense to anyone else?) Under a dietician I can at least have all my cards on the table and the consultant assures me that the new medication will massively help reduce those cravings.
What you are describing is a carb binge driven by your body needing and desiring more carbs and sugars. It is a viscous circle, you eat what you believe is healthy and good for you, say porridge for breakfast.
Then you have a sandwich for lunch, then a dinner or a takeaway that is so filling, then you snack the night away!
Yes, I've been there!
Carbs are probably the root of your problems.
My blood glucose levels at my surgery were 31+ then 29, the second time!
I was misdiagnosed as T2!
It wasn't until I got referral to my endocrinologist that things began to make sense.
Restricting my carbs intake, lowered my blood glucose levels. My insulin resistance began to lower, in lost weight, I found myself in normal blood glucose range when fasting!
Before diagnosis, First thing before breakfast, my levels were normal, I would eat, then all hell would break loose. Because I had eaten carbs. If I didn't, my bloods stayed in normal range.
The fluctuating blood glucose levels up and down had me in a right state.
I now refer to it as my hypo hell!
You can control any 'type' of diabetes with a very low carb diet.
If you get it right, like I have, you will get your life back.
It's not easy, it's not what you would call normal but it will bring your health back.
And more importantly for you, the hunger pangs, the need to eat, the need to binge on sugar goes. It really does! It does work!
The success stories thread forum, will be worth a look as well as the low carb forum.
If you don't have a blood glucose monitor, get one, you need to find out what foods affect you. You have to find out why you spike so high to certain food groups like starchy vegetables, grains, pasta, wheat, fructose, sucrose, even glucose!
My body won't tolerate any of these. I have a major food intolerance. It makes my insulin overshoot! It could be very similar to your condition!
Have a read of our forum, reactive hypoglycaemia.
You will recognise so much.