DiabeticGeek
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 309
- Location
- Nottingham, UK
Any of these are scary and depressing possibilities. I have a horrible suspicion that you are right and cost is at the heart of this. In particular, the way the nurse instantly came up with the same arguments as the GP suggests to me that she was following a "party line". However, to be charitable to them, there is some controversy about this given the recent BMJ articles. I expect that these have already been discussed here, so apologies if I am rehashing old ground, but one of them is on the efficacy of self-monitoring [responses to this] and the other on its cost-effectiveness [responses to this] - both for newly diagnosed T2. If you look at these also make sure to read the responses - they are more interesting than the articles! In short the first is saying that most people in their study (which forced them to follow a rigid year-long pro gramme of testing) ignore the results, ergo there is no benefit. The second says that testing is expensive and hence not cost-effective. In short, as far as I can see these are arguments against testing that is done badly rather than testing per se.Dennis said:Any doctor who says that you should not test is one (or several) of the following
(a) incompetent and shouldn't be practicing
(b) too lazy to bother to explain how to interpret results and act on the findings
(c) trying to cut costs to win brownie points with the PCT (at the expense of your health)
(d) is acting on direct instructions from the PCT to reduce costs
Many thanks for this advice. The more I read the more I am leaning towards testing, and I shall try to use the NICE guidelines to press my GP in that direction. However, I am not optimistic about that - he seemed pretty adamant. The very first thing that he said after giving me the diagnosis - before he talked about diet or anything positive - was "whatever you do don't go out and buy a glucose meter".Dennis said:The NICE guidelines for Type 2 say that patients should be encouraged to self-test provided they have had explained to them what they are testing for and what to do with the results.
Can anyone advise of reliable online pharmacies that sell cheap strips? I have done some googling, and all of the ones that I can find are only about a pound cheaper than Boots (add postage, and they actually work out slightly more expensive). eBay looks more promising, but as ever it is very hit or miss - you need to get lucky to get a bargain. I am also slightly concerned that buying pharmaceuticals from eBay might be a bit dodgy (one of the current sellers talks about marks on the box where the patients name has been removed - hmm...).brianb said:I have purchsed strips from online pharmacys and EBAY MUCh cheaper at about £8 to £12 for the ultrasmart strips.
The whole idea of testing your BS is so that you can do something to change it, not just say "oh, thats interesting" but then not change anything!SilverAndEbony said:. . . and you blood levels are likely to still be the same as they were before you were diagnosed. . . . . . You're blood glucose levels are only going to show you've got diabetes - which you know already.
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