Great to hear of your success but also that you have a medical team that are willing to learn from you.
I only wish there were more like that.
Double triple Trophies for you! What a great reaction to a great history of improved health and remission.
You are allowed to keep a smug hat on for a good while. Well done.
WOW!!!
What a fabulous achievement - and so wonderful to have it recognised and appreciated.
So often, when we low carb, improve our numbers and lose a bit of weight, we drop off the radar and HCPs just don't realise what has happened - therefore they don't see how effective it is, or how life changing. And then of course they haven't seen any evidence that it works. lol.
WELL DONE!!!
Very well done you! My GP is astonished by my success too, not quite as dramatic as you but HbA1cs in the mid thirties for a year now and 6 stone weight loss. Funnily enough I have just today emailed my GP asking how many Type 2s at my surgery have achieved a non diabetic HbA1c and how they achieved it, as I feel we are few and far between. I know @Debandez enquired the same of her surgery and was the only one!
Words fail me ...... that is one amazing achievement and amazing response from the medical team. Very, very well done .... and well done to the doctors for wanting to learn from you. A giant step.
I am thinking of asking my surgery how many have achieved non-diabetic results (and maintained them), and how they did it.
How they did it may be difficult - it depends on what the patient has told them!
Yes I was, my gp said I could have had the same results (weight loss and hba1c down from 62 to 41 in 6 months) so I asked for stats from.the surgery. Apparently only I have managed it apart from post bariatric pts. Shocked and gardener but not surprised. This is a very encouraging thread. Brilliant news.Very well done you! My GP is astonished by my success too, not quite as dramatic as you but HbA1cs in the mid thirties for a year now and 6 stone weight loss. Funnily enough I have just today emailed my GP asking how many Type 2s at my surgery have achieved a non diabetic HbA1c and how they achieved it, as I feel we are few and far between. I know @Debandez enquired the same of her surgery and was the only one!
Awesome. Awesome for what you have achieved and awesome for the medical team acknowledging they can learn from you. Sad on the other hand that after all these years it comes as a surprise to them that low carb is the right diet to recommend to diabetics. Thanks for sharing.I went to the Hospital today for an appointment in the Diabetes And Endocrinology department concerning my very low blood reading a few months ago.
I saw the nurse at first who took my weight, height, blood pressure and my waist measurement. After this, I saw a doctor who works with the Specialist. I had the surprised but complimentary remarks and facial expressions about my weight loss, (8 and a half stone), and how I'd reversed my Diabetes from the doctors and nurses. I've become accustomed to this now. We went through my history concerning the Diabetes and any other conditions that I have.
My hba1c has been 27 for a couple of years now and they prefer it to be between 30 and 40. This began to drop dramatically when I radically changed my diet. I told him that I have no symptoms of Hypoglycemia but because I'm in the Perimenopause too, the symptoms can mimic each other. I have tested my blood if I've felt dizzy, for example, and it's been okay and in the normal range for a non-diabetic. When he asked me how I'd done it, I told him that I had done it by going low carb and cutting out the sugar, etc, by 95%. He made notes and after a while he brought the Specialist to see me. He wanted to know if I'd had surgery or joined a group to lose the weight and I told him no, I'd done it on my own.
The Specialist, like the other doctors and nurses, was pleasantly surprised and said they don't see this very often. I believe that some who have done what I have, have needed help and this is what seems to perplex the medical teams because understandably losing so much weight is no easy task. He reeled off so much that my brain decided to take a mini vacation so I just took note of as much as I could. He was willing to listen to see if someone like me could help them regarding the Diabetes itself. One thing that made me smile was when he said:
"We need to learn from you".
It is so refreshing to have this said to me and have amazing doctors and nurses where we live who don't berate you or your choice of eating low carb. This one sentence meant such a lot and if, like another doctor once asked, he wants to use my case to help them, I'm more than happy to do so.
I have to have my cortisol levels checked within four days of having a mixed meal, (a carb drink), then have my bloods tested. I'm always nervous about anything to do with my health but fingers crossed this will all come back okay. I am asymptomatic because I don't appear to have any symptoms of Hypoglycemia and I haven't been diagnosed as that yet. We'll see what the tests say. I'm very grateful for the service I've received.
I have said to my husband again that I want him to come to my appointments just to see the reactions from the doctors and nurses. I'm sure some people must think I'm exaggerating but I'm not. One bonus for me is that I come out of my appointments rather smug although this isn't reciprocated by others around me. It's more a case of.."oh no..she's here again"
Thanks Brunneria. It was lovely again to be appreciated for what I've done. I think at the back of their minds, they must sometimes think of all the money that has been saved by someone like me doing this without medical intervention or costly treatments. I like to think that I'm saving the NHS lots of money through not having the Diabetes medication and losing the weight on my own.
When I started out, I didn't even realise just how low carb I eventually ate and then when I sat and thought about it, even I was amazed. I tell anyone in the medical field when I can how I've done it and I've not had one person so far refute it. I am more than willing to become an example for them if it helps to get the message out there. If my Diabetes reversal and weight loss isn't evidence, they aren't looking hard enough. I might have a t-shirt printed with.."look, I'm a low carber..join me why don't you"..lol.
Thanks Brunneria. It was lovely again to be appreciated for what I've done. I think at the back of their minds, they must sometimes think of all the money that has been saved by someone like me doing this without medical intervention or costly treatments. I like to think that I'm saving the NHS lots of money through not having the Diabetes medication and losing the weight on my own.
When I started out, I didn't even realise just how low carb I eventually ate and then when I sat and thought about it, even I was amazed. I tell anyone in the medical field when I can how I've done it and I've not had one person so far refute it. I am more than willing to become an example for them if it helps to get the message out there. If my Diabetes reversal and weight loss isn't evidence, they aren't looking hard enough. I might have a t-shirt printed with.."look, I'm a low carber..join me why don't you"..lol.
I went to the Hospital today for an appointment in the Diabetes And Endocrinology department concerning my very low blood reading a few months ago.
I saw the nurse at first who took my weight, height, blood pressure and my waist measurement. After this, I saw a doctor who works with the Specialist. I had the surprised but complimentary remarks and facial expressions about my weight loss, (8 and a half stone), and how I'd reversed my Diabetes from the doctors and nurses. I've become accustomed to this now. We went through my history concerning the Diabetes and any other conditions that I have.
My hba1c has been 27 for a couple of years now and they prefer it to be between 30 and 40. This began to drop dramatically when I radically changed my diet. I told him that I have no symptoms of Hypoglycemia but because I'm in the Perimenopause too, the symptoms can mimic each other. I have tested my blood if I've felt dizzy, for example, and it's been okay and in the normal range for a non-diabetic. When he asked me how I'd done it, I told him that I had done it by going low carb and cutting out the sugar, etc, by 95%. He made notes and after a while he brought the Specialist to see me. He wanted to know if I'd had surgery or joined a group to lose the weight and I told him no, I'd done it on my own.
The Specialist, like the other doctors and nurses, was pleasantly surprised and said they don't see this very often. I believe that some who have done what I have, have needed help and this is what seems to perplex the medical teams because understandably losing so much weight is no easy task. He reeled off so much that my brain decided to take a mini vacation so I just took note of as much as I could. He was willing to listen to see if someone like me could help them regarding the Diabetes itself. One thing that made me smile was when he said:
"We need to learn from you".
It is so refreshing to have this said to me and have amazing doctors and nurses where we live who don't berate you or your choice of eating low carb. This one sentence meant such a lot and if, like another doctor once asked, he wants to use my case to help them, I'm more than happy to do so.
I have to have my cortisol levels checked within four days of having a mixed meal, (a carb drink), then have my bloods tested. I'm always nervous about anything to do with my health but fingers crossed this will all come back okay. I am asymptomatic because I don't appear to have any symptoms of Hypoglycemia and I haven't been diagnosed as that yet. We'll see what the tests say. I'm very grateful for the service I've received.
I have said to my husband again that I want him to come to my appointments just to see the reactions from the doctors and nurses. I'm sure some people must think I'm exaggerating but I'm not. One bonus for me is that I come out of my appointments rather smug although this isn't reciprocated by others around me. It's more a case of.."oh no..she's here again"
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