A) Because of costs - although if you balance that against the number of people who have probably saved the NHS money because they have managed to control their sugars through 'eating to their meters' so do not suffer, or have delayed, the complications of diabetes it is a little short sightedI was wondering if anyone knows the real reason Dr's don't prescribe testing kits? I was diagnosed a few weeks ago after getting another abscess operated onI asked at diagnosis if I would get a blood testing kit and was told "no it will make you depressed" at a later appointment with the 'diabetic' nurse I asked why I had not been offered one to which I was told "you will just make your fingers sore".
Why when I demonstrate a wish to control my diabetes am I denied the tools which will help me? Surely it will save the NHS money in the long term?
I have bought my own kit but just can't understand the mentality.
Or as other have said in the past on other threadsCan't add anything other than to agree with all above posts. You can get lucky and find a gp practice that will give you a tester such as my gp nurse did. And that was before being on insulin.. But don't hold your breath.. ....It could be worth trying a well researched and polite worded (very well rehearsed) written statement and have counter arguments for the reasons you will be given not to have a tester. I have found that if any health care professional I have encountered KNOWS you know what you're taking about, you stand a better chance of not being fobbed off with the 'we know best ' attitude.
Been there done thatOr as other have said in the past on other threads
"WOULD YOU DRIVE YOUR CAR WITHOUT A SPEEDO & END UP IN TROUBLE".
Slightly confused. You seem to think that your blood readings are a guide as to when to eat. I would suggest they are a guide as to what not to eat, usually too many carbs. Irregular eating can lead to snacking of the wrong kind. Most lowcarbers credit fat for the suppression of hunger pangs, and have learned various ok snacks, such as nuts.As I'm still learning what affects me, this can lead to "I feel nauseous, I must need to eat" - instead I've tested, to find I'm 7-8+ so obviously eating is the last thing I need to do! I do get anxious if I can't figure why my reading is high, but a T1 friend told me not to worry too much about imbalances as they're to be expected. I would like to have a go at the LC diet but not sure I can manage it as I'm a lifelong carb addict, so even cutting way down has been difficult.
A lot of us were lifelong carb addicts.. that's what got us in this mess to start with... once you have decided to stop then it becomes much easier. I prefer to have my eyes and toes intact rather than have that slice of (when you really think about it) rather tasteless bread.I was diagnosed Sept 2016 and a friend advised me to get a test kit. I went to chemist to buy one and was advised that my GP
should prescribe one. I rang the GP to be told "you don't need to test, you're on Metformin". Predictably I ignored them and bought it anyway, got all the supplies online. I swing between testing before & after breakfast and same after evening meal to thinking I feel ok so won't bother testing. As I'm still learning what affects me, this can lead to "I feel nauseous, I must need to eat" - instead I've tested, to find I'm 7-8+ so obviously eating is the last thing I need to do! I do get anxious if I can't figure why my reading is high, but a T1 friend told me not to worry too much about imbalances as they're to be expected. I would like to have a go at the LC diet but not sure I can manage it as I'm a lifelong carb addict, so even cutting way down has been difficult.
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