Jeff Stevens
New Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
My name is Jeff and I'm a 67 year old Type 2 Diabetic. New on here, so I'm looking forward to exchanging thoughts and ideas.
Hi Jeff, welcome, I am Tim and i'm a 47 year old Type 2.
Welcome to the forum @Jeff Stevens
How have you found it over the last 10 years? Do you take any medication to help manage your BG levels? Do you use a blood glucose monitor?
It can be a huge help to connect to a crowd of people all facing the same challenges, frustrations, and day-to-day decisions, to share ideas and strategies, encourage each other, or just congratulate and commiserate each other in the thick of it.
We are a friendly bunch, so ask away with any questions. Is there anything that you are finding particularly tricky at the moment?
Can I add a caveat to Drummer's comment on low carb and gliclazide? You can combine low carbing and gliclazide but you have to take care to make sure your blood glucose does not go too low. If you are on gliclazide, your surgery should have prescribed a blood glucose monitor to allow to monitor it and this will allow you to cut carbs without taking undue risks.
Worked for me.
Dunno who told you your HbA1c only needs to be 'under 59' - when an initial diagnosis of diabetes is any HbA1c at 48 or over - 42-47.9 leads to a diagnosis of 'pre-diabetes' these days, but the only way of reversing it, is to adopt a diet with less carbohydrate in it and/or adopt a sustainable exercise routine, preferably both.
Hence - start reducing your carb intake asap, with the caveats already given regarding Gliclazide. If you hold a driving licence, unless you test your BG before each time you drive to ensure it isn't too low - you are breaking the Law and that's precisely why GP surgeries are supposed to prescribe blood testing meters and strips to all people on such a drug.
Look forward to seeing your readings decrease and if you need any tips or suggestions for low carb substitutes or treats just ask. Figuring out what to buy when you go shopping for the first few months can be frustrating, but once you get into a regular routine of what to buy and how to cook it, it all becomes a lot easier.
am I pregnant or planning to be (hardly, at 69!)
QUESTIONS:
1) Are there any members on here who might have tried this 800 calorie a day shake diet?
2) Does anyone know if starting this short term diet might cause any medical problems initially?
3) How much exercise do other members take, and in what form, exactly?
Before reviews the last 2 years, I have had to fill in a form -drinking, smoking, depression, am I pregnant or planning to be (hardly, at 69!), etc - and on the form it tells me my HbA1c target is 55! When it has been 38 to 41 the last few years. It might be their target, but certainly not mine.
I’m right at the start of the Newcastle diet. I’ve read the books and done my research.I think @zoombapup gave it a go, and @ColinUK. Maybe one or two others too.
You can search for Newcastle Diet
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Search results for query: Newcastle diet
forum.diabetes.org.uk
Or “800 calorie”
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Search results for query: “800 calorie”
forum.diabetes.org.uk
We have marathon runners, joggers, amblers, wanderers, swimmers, dancers, golfers, horse riders, cyclists and almost everything else you can imagine!
Take a look in the exercise section
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Exercise/Sport
Please post all your exercise/sport queries and experiences in this forum.forum.diabetes.org.uk
I’m right at the start of the Newcastle diet. I’ve read the books and done my research.
What questions do you have? (Not that I can pretend I’ll be able to answer them definitively but I might be able to offer an opinion or my experiences so far)