Hello
@sunny day . I see you have already received some great advise, so I won’t repeat it.
Yes your Hb1ac of 98 is high, but many of us were higher at diagnosis, me included. Just as Rome wasn’t built in one day nor is good diabetes control, we often say on here , diabetes is a marathon not a sprint, in time you will learn what works for you , on thing I feel is very important is, not to set yourself up to fail by being far to strict with your diet or by being to lax.
We are all very different in what and how many carbohydrates can tolerate .
We are normally fine with protein and this may surprise you good fats.
Some things that are considered healthy you may find are not good for your blood glucose levels, these can include fruit juice, breakfast cereals, fruit and smoothies . Any fruit with berry in its name is often tolerated better than those luscious juicy fruits , but as I said earlier we are all different in this respect.
Many of us find that testing our own BG (blood glucose) levels directly before eating then two hours later, we build up knowledge on what we do and don’t tolerate well, so that we can make informed food choices .
Have a read of this blog by Alan S.
test-test-test
If you decide you would like to self test and your Gp practice (which is most likely)won’t provide you with a glucose meter and test strips .
If you decide to buy your own glucose meter, it’s really the ongoing cost of the testing strips you need to watch out for, glucose meters sold in chemists often use test strips that cost in excess of £15 for a pot of 50 .
The SD Codefree meter that many buy uses strips that cost £8 .
It’s available here
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Codefree-Glucose-Monitor-Monitoring-Testing/dp/B0068JAJFS/ref=as_li_ss_tl?s=drugstore&ie=UTF8&qid=1506485682&sr=1-1&keywords=sd+codefree+meter+mmol/l&linkCode=sl1&tag=xfm-21&linkId=f39210144fdc26c27738e45b6d957003&th=1