Winifreds child
Active Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
Has anyone over the age of 68 gone on the pathway to remission without medication or is it not allowed
I don't think age has anything to do with it but it is usually for those who need to lose quite a bit of weight and have a high HbA1C.Has anyone over the age of 68 gone on the pathway to remission without medication or is it not allowed
At 68 you’re too old for this programHas anyone over the age of 68 gone on the pathway to remission without medication or is it not allowed
You don't have to be on a programme to get to remission, though. I was also too old (diagnosed aged 70) but I researched what was needed and then got on with it. Going it alone takes willpower, commitment and determination and it helped that I signed up to DUK and was able to tap into the vast library of experience that this forum provides.Has anyone over the age of 68 gone on the pathway to remission without medication or is it not allowed
Thanks for the message I can see now they do have a cut off …not sure if it’s for financial reasons or we are just written off after 65 it’s a complex business this diabetesAt 68 you’re too old for this program
Hi thanks for your reply I was very interested in your story and admire that you have achieved it …did you get pressurised or was your doctor in agreement …I feel I could do it but see it’s not easy the reward being no tablets no side effects the only down side I can see is if complications do happen you have to take the blame …but life takes it’s course anyway I would accept seriously restrictions of what to eat to live my life out naturally….but I have to admit I was definitely upset by my doctor’s aggressive attitude and definitely intimidated that has happened twice now and I’m really shocked ….so I feel I have the strength to get my results but not sure if I have enough to stand up to the doctor or go against them that feels a bit pathetic my family don’t know how to advise meYou don't have to be on a programme to get to remission, though. I was also too old (diagnosed aged 70) but I researched what was needed and then got on with it. Going it alone takes willpower, commitment and determination and it helped that I signed up to DUK and was able to tap into the vast library of experience that this forum provides.
It’s probably more cost effective for younger people who have more likelihood of long term complications. As you get older and particularly once you’re over 65 the length of long term complications is shortening. There’s probably other things involved too like frailty etc, people tend to be on other medications for other conditions as they get older making it more complicated, etc.Thanks for the message I can see now they do have a cut off …not sure if it’s for financial reasons or we are just written off after 65 it’s a complex business this diabetes
The short answer to your question is neither. Apart from telling me I had diabetes (but not which type) my GP did nothing except hand me over to the DN, who decided I was T2 and prescribed Metformin. As is my way I left the surgery determined to learn all I could about T2 and how to manage it, and it was during my research that I came across stories about remission. Six weeks later I was making such good progress in bringing down my BG that the DN suggested I stopped taking the Metformin to see how I got on without it. I haven't taken it since. The most support and encouragement I got was from this forum, which dwarfed (and still does) anything from my surgery.Hi thanks for your reply I was very interested in your story and admire that you have achieved it …did you get pressurised or was your doctor in agreement?
Hi thanks for your reply I was very interested in your story and admire that you have achieved it …did you get pressurised or was your doctor in agreement … but I have to admit I was definitely upset by my doctor’s aggressive attitude and definitely intimidated that has happened twice now and I’m really shocked ….so I feel I have the strength to get my results but not sure if I have enough to stand up to the doctor
Pretty much my path, too. I also followed the principle that upping protein helps to offset the loss of muscle mass as you get older, until I saw a CKD Stage 3a diagnosis pop up on my Patient Access record. Since too much protein can be bad for kidney health I eased off and went for the grams-per-kilo-of-body-weight approach instead.Anyway, FWIW it's close to what I did: cutting about 500 cal per day, grinding off a half a kilo to a kilo per week, moderate exercise, staying on metformin for a while etc. Not sure how important the high-protein piece is, from an adherence point of view, but in any case keeping protein reasonably high is beneficial to prevent too much loss of muscle mass with extended weight loss. (Wish I had realised that at the time!)
I think that’s amazing actually do you find your new lifestyle and diet hard to keep to do you ever eat breadThe short answer to your question is neither. Apart from telling me I had diabetes (but not which type) my GP did nothing except hand me over to the DN, who decided I was T2 and prescribed Metformin. As is my way I left the surgery determined to learn all I could about T2 and how to manage it, and it was during my research that I came across stories about remission. Six weeks later I was making such good progress in bringing down my BG that the DN suggested I stopped taking the Metformin to see how I got on without it. I haven't taken it since. The most support and encouragement I got was from this forum, which dwarfed (and still does) anything from my surgery.
Yes, I do eat bread but not every day and rarely more than one slice (as toast). I avoid the mass-produced stuff that supermarkets sell, though. We buy unsliced seeded wholemeal from the shop at our local garden centre. It comes in fresh every day from a bakery just over the border in Hampshire.I think that’s amazing actually do you find your new lifestyle and diet hard to keep to do you ever eat bread
Thank you for your message it was interesting to me reading your story I can see small points where you might have had a bit more help or advice and that must have been disappointing but sometimes you don’t see another way when you don’t have all the information …you are making good progress that’s really good news I hope you continue to keep as well as possible …im seeing a bit of a pattern that older people seem a bit overlooked as if we don’t matter that much the numbers don’t add up to invest time or money …I didn’t get any advice in prediabetis except one nurse said don’t eat Yorkshire puddings or cheese I regret just cutting out sugar and not researching it more but can’t go back I will update my progress in the next few weeks again thankyou I appreciate your thoughtsI haven't tried the pathway. My hba1c end of June, test at my request was 69. I rarely exercised and had put on weight after an early menopause. I had been 89 kg for years as I had the will power not to go over.but if i had seen an encouraging doctor low carb i now know would have reduced my weight. I was told my cholestral had crept up so cut pastry cakes and red and processed meat. I started walking more. I was eating lots of fish and veg, low carb without realising. I was losing 2lb a week. I was disappointed my hba1c had only reduced to 64. Two weeks later I saw the DCN she said the hcp I had seen had written SGLT2. She didn't know whether I should have metformin or the SGLT2. Neither were discussed. She said she'd phone me after speaking to hcp. Result was metformin. Once I'd reached 4 my dose was altered to 2 and SGLT2 added Two weeks later a statin was added. I liked the low carb but felt knocked off course by the SGLT2 as I was given conflicting advice about carbs. By end of September my hba1c was 51.
I wish I had discovered forum earlier and made more of an effort. I was 70 when diagnosed so couldn't join official remission programme plus in any event having started with a bmi of 32 I'm now under 27. Eg I've lost more than 2 stone.
Having seen how my surgery operates I'm sure the remission programme is not cost effective for over 65s or those overweight a little. I've had high BP since 2007 and I had hba1c in 2014 but not told. I had assumed my blood's tested each year for diabetes but it wasn't. This seems to have been a financial not clinical judgment,
Good luck in what you decide to do. Be bold.
Thanks so much for your message I appreciate your thoughts I think I am going to have this medication initially and at the same time restrict my diet to low carb continue to try to lose more weight until I reach the numbers that I think should mean I don’t need medication…just a bit worried about something I read that explains that diet can only ever help 22% of the diabetes and that leaves 78% of it going untreated in the body not finding that easy to understand or if I have that right if so does it mean diet alone could never control it do you know anything about it .Sorry to hear you’ve had such e negative experience with your Dr @Winifreds child - it’s not right that you should be made to feel intimidated, and scared to advocate for your own health.
Remission is generally defined as maintaining an HbA1c below 48mmol/mol without the need for medications. So forum folks who have aimed for remission either under their own steam, or as part of an NHS provided programme are actively reducing their risk of complications. If their efforts were not maintaining the reduction in HbA1c, there would be a need to consider adding some medication or other as an additional support.
In fact I believe @Martin.A took medication initially. And only gradually reduced/removed it when his levels had improved such that it no longer seemed necessary.
I think the aim here is diabetes management rather than ‘no meds’. In some senses I think it’s slightly unfair on T2s, because some HCPs seem to treat medication (and especially adding further medications) as a mark of ‘failure’, in a way they never would for insulin with T1s. But different bodies need different support/help… and to my mind it should be improved diabetes management that you aim for.
If you can manage that with reduced meds, then that’s all well and good… but only if your BG levels are equally well managed without them. 🙂