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What should i do now

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Would that be a finger prick test you do Mark? This compared to a HbA1c, and between diabetics and none diabetics, is where it gets complicated.
Yes, finger prick test. The different readings (mmol/l, mmol/mol & percentage) is confusing and when a GP just gives you a number with no details, it could mean anything.
 
My understanding is that anything over 48 is diabetic. 43 is pre-diabetic. However, when I finished my diabetes prevention course I was told they prefer it under 40 so perhaps they have brought it down again, I don't know.

I had results of hba1c 33, 35, 37 and 35 during that time and was told they were all fine.
 
My understanding is that anything over 48 is diabetic. 43 is pre-diabetic. However, when I finished my diabetes prevention course I was told they prefer it under 40 so perhaps they have brought it down again, I don't know.

I had results of hba1c 33, 35, 37 and 35 during that time and was told they were all fine.

There where the boundaries are and there's what They're bothered about.
I believe your results Maz are healthy, and non diabetic. Fine doesn't cover it. More great
 
Thanks Ralph. I was very pleased about it. I worked very hard at it and took lots of advice from members of this Forum. in fact, I took more notice of people here than the "Eat Well Plate" which I thought was too carby.

I have an Accu Check machine and I also bought an SD codefree as the strips are much cheaper. I try to stick to foods I know don't affect me too much with the occasional treat. I also check if I eat a food I don't normally eat just to see what happens and if I can tolerate it as tolerance of food seems so individual. I check fasting bloods from time to time and also random ones. If I get a series of readings I am unhappy about I will alert my GP. My pre diabetes came as a total shock and I was so grateful I was caught in time, unlike a couple of friends of mine who had diabetes with no symptoms and were picked up by accident on a health check.
 
The Eat Well Plate is good, but aimed at a 'normal' person's diet. When I went on my Xpert course, it was recommended to cut that down to 5-7 portions from the carbs side (avoiding white carbs) which is roughly half the recommended daily amount, and to increase from the veg side to compensate - although keep to 'above ground' veg as they're generally better. In gram terms, this is about 100-130g a day. As long as you look to either up your fat or protein intake a bit to cover the lack of energy you'd usually get from the carbs, you're ok. Of course, this is just a starting point - you still have to look at what you're eating to see of that's acceptable to your personal tolerance level, but I found it a good place to aim for to start with to help get used to my carb reduction.
 
The Eat Well Plate is good, but aimed at a 'normal' person's diet. When I went on my Xpert course, it was recommended to cut that down to 5-7 portions from the carbs side (avoiding white carbs) which is roughly half the recommended daily amount, and to increase from the veg side to compensate - although keep to 'above ground' veg as they're generally better. In gram terms, this is about 100-130g a day. As long as you look to either up your fat or protein intake a bit to cover the lack of energy you'd usually get from the carbs, you're ok. Of course, this is just a starting point - you still have to look at what you're eating to see of that's acceptable to your personal tolerance level, but I found it a good place to aim for to start with to help get used to my carb reduction.

About 120 g a day was what my GP said so I tried to stick to around that or under.
 
I have to stick to below 60g carb a day to keep my BG in line. I find anything more than 20g a meal will cause a spike, especially if it is a low fat meal. But of course, we are all different & tolerate carbs differently. It's good to start off with a ballpark figure though, as Beck says.
 
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