Proud to be erratic
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 3c
- Pronouns
- He/Him
Not so strange, really. We are all different. Other ailments and thus other treatment paths..... Other blood test results...... Known other medical responses, particularly when a patient has a longstanding relationship with a particular GP or Surgery...... Different ethnic backgrounds perhaps....Strange that you and I were diagnosed with near-identical levels (114 & 20.5 for me) but whereas you've been prescribed Gliclazide I was prescribed Metformin, and after a few weeks my DN decided I probably didn't even need that (she was right). Not for the first time no consistency in the NHS.
If you'd seen my DN and I'd seen yours.......
Those aspects aside, you are correct, @Martin.A, about some noticeable inconsistencies within the medical profession. Presumably these occur from different training backgrounds, different regional/cultural practices. We are a deceptively cosmopolitan society, after decades of immigration, particularly from the (former much larger) Commonwealth. Conversely the NHS has been consistently wrong, for decades, about healthy eating - particularly where fats and oils are in the vocabulary!