The morning readings are the last to come down, so not the greatest measuring stick. Maybe do those once a week, once every two weeks, as that'd save you strips you can use for moments that are more telling/in flux, mainly around meals. You've already gotten great advice on this, so.... If you want to see a downward trend happening, the best gauge would be what happens around meals. Get that consistently "right", meaning a rise of 2.0mmol/l or less, then your over all numbers will drop too. Also keep in mind that your body might respond different to exercise than you might expect. When you do something strenuous your liver might dump glucose to "help", and that can put your numbers up when you'd think they'd go down! Doing something calm over an extended period of time, like a long walk, would likely bring numbers down though.After a recent very high HBA1C test, I've embarked on a plan of reducing carbs and increasing exercise.
As I can only have an HBA1C test occasionally I'd like to use a meter to roughly track my progress.
Is the best way to do this to track my fasting level in the mornings? Look for a general downward trend? Any other suggestions.
My DN is talking about insulin if I can't get things under control so I don't really want to fly blind for the next 3 months till the next blood test appointment.
TIA
Mat
I noticed after I replied that you had 90 some previous posts. Sorry (I did tell you I wasn't the brightest) but I'm glad you're getting back on track.I'm not newly diagnosed BTW, 12 years in, and kinda lost it during lockdown etc and now trying to get back on track! (Lockdown really wasn't good for us boredom/comfort eaters)
You posted me some useful meter advice in another thread a couple of days agoThanks for the tag @Margarettt , looks like @MadMat has got a meter now, but let me know if you still require that info.
Ah ok, glad you have one nowYou posted me some useful meter advice in another thread a couple of days ago
Thanks again.
Mat
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