I’m neither good nor bad if I read low. The reading is just a number. But I don’t always rise by the same amount after I get up. Some days I hardly rise at all. So the reading I take when I’ve just woken up is the most consistently accurate one for basing my action plan for the next night.
What I'm trying to say, is that consistency is the most important thing for me ( and for a lot of other people, I would imagine). It’s not me trying to get a false impression of how low I’ve got my waking number. If that’s what I wanted, I’d set an alarm for 3am when I know it’ll be at its lowest.
(Of course, when I’m using a Libre sensor I don’t need to time the testing, except to make sure it’s less than 8hours since the bedtime one, because I get a continuous trace, but that’s not something I can fund very often, and I know some people won’t be able to afford it at all.)
(Another point I ought to make, is that when I first started testing, it was when I was on Metformin and Gliclazide, as I was misdiagnosed as Type2.)
@travellor It could be me being dim. I don't understand half your comments. What exactly is your issue with the advice to test as soon as you wake? Or any other advice here?
Like I said, it means I test at exactly the same time every day. Plus Doug is newly diagnosed, like me. We are still getting used to medication levels etc, so for us it’s learning about how our bodies are responding. It’s not being a slave to numbers, it’s being sensible and responsible for our condition. Nobody wants to lose feet here. I really can’t see what your objection is to getting into good habits early on.
What does a fasting level tell you?
I was in the habit of testing just after getting up & then again after faffing around with shower etc etc before breakfast. I thought it was interesting to see what kind of DP was happening & I suppose how my insulin sensitivity was doing.
What is your problem? So rude.What does a fasting level tell you?
I would think I a baseline for the day, whether you go up or down.What does a fasting level tell you?
I would think I a baseline for the day, whether you go up or down.
Well in my case post breakfast I also most always have fallen.For a type 2, it tells you how well you've reacted in your sleep, and what several hours of insulin release has done to your body.
You then will see a rise as you get up, eat , exercise, and that's where testing is more useful.
(Unless you had a nightmare, or even just slept badly, as your liver dumps in your sleep)
I actually tested for high numbers, after I knew how my body reacted.
So I tended to test after 1 hour aster eating, looking for primary insulin response, even though I knew I would be higher than after two.
I tested with hot and cold hands. (a hand tested after being under your duvet can be a couple of points different to one that has just been washed in cold water)
Running up and down stairs a couple of times can reduce your BG reading by more than 2.
Lots of factors come into play.
I used to test to control my BG, I was fortunate, I was prescribed 100 strips a month for testing, but if you are funding them yourself, it's quite expensive to test, so I would suggest fasting test tells you nothing by itself initially, and testing after meals is far more useful.
Well in my case post breakfast I also most always have fallen.
I do not find my results are the same always the same eating the same things. Also going up and down stairs a couple of times would not cause mine to fall either.
I can fall between 1-3 points. Again it is not always the same. Like others some exercise type seems to go up before coming down some hours later.
We are not all the same.