The NHS approach is basically "lose weight, see what happens" it's what I did and has thus far worked. It's not for everyone, it may not be for many of us.. but it will probably work for someone else rather than just me!
There is one nurse in my GP practice who is an 'expert' and tells me the diabetes teams at hospitals never do the job properly!
I did the DAFNE course a few years back and they explain that you should wait four hours after insulin and eating before testing your bloods as the levels are still dropping up to that point.
Conversation with nurse went like this:
Nurse: what are you blood sugars 2 hours after eating?
Me: I don't test after 2 hours, I wait until 4 as per DAFNE instructions
Nurse: you have to test after 2 hours
Me: DAFNE says 4 because .... And explained
nurse: I've never heard that before so you are obviously wrong
Me and the diabetes team at the hospital had a really good giggle about it.
Out of date nurses can do so much damage rather than good!
Are you type 2?
I'm type 1 and taking insulin for each meal you have, testing 2 hours after will give a higher reading than after 4 hours as the insulin is still working to lower it. Testing after 2 hours may make you think you need additional insulin as reading is higher than you expect ... Which is then likely to result in a hypo an hour or so later.
The NHS (or any other health care system in the western world) approach is NOT simply to tell type 2 patients to "lose weight and see what happens". If all it took to get people to lose weight was to tell them to lose weight, only people who wanted to be over weight would be over weight. Ridiculous.Morning.. I have nothing else to offer this thread at the moment. My statement "The NHS approach worked for me" stands. @NoCrbs4Me correctly points out it's not word for word.. but it's very much my baseline. The NHS approach is basically "lose weight, see what happens" it's what I did and has thus far worked. It's not for everyone, it may not be for many of us.. but it will probably work for someone else rather than just me!
The NHS (or any other health care system in the western world) approach is NOT simply to tell type 2 patients to "lose weight and see what happens". If all it took to get people to lose weight was to tell them to lose weight, only people who wanted to be over weight would be over weight. Ridiculous.
Well you can look at your post and see what you wrote, but here it is: "The NHS approach is basically "lose weight, see what happens" it's what I did and has thus far worked."I don't think that's what I said. Certainly not what I implied. However losing weight, if required, is step 1 in diabetes management. But you knew what I meant.
Yes I so agree.I think it is so very fortunate for mikej he actually had weight to lose and an appalling diet to boot. So easily sorted and voila, normal glucose metabolism. For us with diabetes it is harder.
I think it is so very fortunate for mikej he actually had weight to lose and an appalling diet to boot. So easily sorted and voila, normal glucose metabolism. For us with diabetes it is harder.
Ah, the pension. I understand.No. I feel my diabetes is in remission but being in the system means a much closer eye is kept on feet, eyes etc etc. It's Ballache with the civil aviation authority in terms of pilot licencing and medical requirements but I'm only confident things are good now. What happens in the coming months and years is unknown and unpredictable.
That and the increased annuity when I cash my pensions in!
Ah, the pension. I understand.
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