Charliewatch
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
Do many T2 members test their blood with blood sugar testing machine?
Without a meter I would never have known that my BS was in the high 20s/ low 30s as I felt perfectly ok. Type 2s do not seem to have the bad physical reaction that Type 1s have.Do many T2 members test their blood with blood sugar testing machine?
You should be able to pick them up at your surgery or the hospital diabetes centre. Sometimes chemists have them too. If all else fails contact the manufacturer of the meter you decide to buy and they will send them to you. Do register with them as you can get free batteries as well. All diaries are produced by the different manufacturers so are different in layout but all give columns for several readings a day.Is there a blood sugar diary available that is a proper little booklet do other members use a dairy.
A common problem for T2s - the 36 weeks is because the HBA1c test the GP will get done on your blood will tell the average blood sugar reading over the last 3 months and is the guideline by which your surgery will get payments (% of patients achieving a certain HBA1c target). Your GP will also have a large number of patients that will deny or ignore their condition and on whom self testing would be wasted.I started testing within a week of being diagnosed and it's the most sensible decision I've made in many years!
My GP said there was no need to test and I should leave it to him as he's the expert. 😡 He gave me a diet sheet and told me to follow it until my prescription ran out (after giving me a repeatable 'scrip to cover 36 weeks - yes, that's 36, not a typo) then he'd re-test me to see if the tablets needed increasing. I don't see that as me managing my condition so I got a meter and started testing.
It took 3 days to realise that the recommendations on the diet sheet weren't going to help me get my levels under control. In fact, by the way they spiked to the roof after I'd eaten the 'right' amount of root veg or brown rice, I worried that the doctor's advice was going to make me more ill and lead to an ever-increasing spiral of medication.
I know some people are fine with letting their GP do the testing and that's okay - it's their choice. But it's not my way. If there was a little gizmo I could attach 24 hours a day to tell me my sugar and other blood levels at any given moment, I'd have one and adjust my diet on a daily basis to get optimum readings.![]()