Guest guest Posted June 28, 2004 Report Share Posted June 28, 2004 > Then when you have a new food > you want to see how it reacts, > you test two hours after a meal > - once - and then work out how > to work it into the diet. What do you mean by " a new food " , Melisma, and how do you " work it into the diet " ? The idea of " working a new food into the diet " is a new one on me. I cannot even remember seeing a new food in years, everything is pretty much the same as it has always been around here! > In my circumstances I try to test > twice a day at the minimum - > breakfast and at least one other > meal, or just before bed. I feel > most comfortable testing before > all meals, tho', so I plan my strip > purchases with three to four tests > per day. I also test between meals > if I suspect I'm having a low - and > indeed, it's sometimes taken me > four to six test/treat cycles, so > I usually try to get more strips > than I think I will use in a month, > just in case. OK, I don't know what your circum- stances are but if you were a usual NIDD type 2 isn't that a lot of tests, 4 a day? In Germany, the health insurance normally pays for 100 strips a quarter, so one a day, and that is usually considered sufficient since they don't expect a type 2 to test every day if in good control. You must have a good insurance? My wife tests about 5 times in 2 days as she has gastroparesis and I give her some of my strips. > Sorry about not making my original > post clearer. Oh, no, it was a very good post and I thank you for it. I learnt some new things from it. > The main point was that people > are individuals, and we should > not assume that what will work for > us will work for them - and vice > versa. If you are referring to treatment, then I agree. But the principles of nutrition are not tailored to individuals, not over here at any rate, but quantities are determined according to age groups, sex, whether pregnant or lactating, body weight and things like that, but apart from special cases of intolerance or allergies, the official nutritional recommendations are applied to everybody alike. > Test yourself to make sure that > your body is dealing with the > food you eat, ... OK, so that is where we differ. I don't do that. I run on autopilot and trust that the system and my medication are taking care of it. If something was radically wrong then I reckon that it would show up at my next HbA1c and I cannot see me hand-operating my metabolism with only a BG meter to go on. It would be different if I was using insulin but I am not. My 500mg Glucophage each day gives me HbA1c of around 5.4% every quarter and that is what matters to me. The individual BG readings in between do not bother me too much. As you said: Different strokes for different folks! If you are taking so many readings every day, how do you get away from the atmosphere of being " sick " all the time? Doesn't that detract from your " quality of life " somewhat? > ... rather than restricting your > diet according to what someone > else tells you is 'bad for > diabetics'... There I agree with you. > Melisma (slinking shamefaced back > under her Rock) I am intrigued by the " slinking " , Melisma, and have been meaning to ask you about it. What is behind that? Regards Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 28, 2004 Report Share Posted June 28, 2004 that's interesting. where i go, while regimens are being worked out, one tests 7 times a day minimum. more when exercising or driving at an usual time. i'm type 1, but that seems to go for both types. when things are worked out, then it goes to 4 a day min. 'course i go to a research hospital. they did some studies, though, that showed intensive management made a huge difference in complication rates, and also in reducing existing problems. however, i know it's definitely not the standard program. my insurance definitely had to be persuaded to pay for so many test strips. rach OK, I don't know what your circum- stances are but if you were a usual NIDD type 2 isn't that a lot of tests, 4 a day? In Germany, the health insurance normally pays for 100 strips a quarter, so one a day, and that is usually considered sufficient since they don't expect a type 2 to test every day if in good control. You must have a good insurance? My wife tests about 5 times in 2 days as she has gastroparesis and I give her some of my strips. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 28, 2004 Report Share Posted June 28, 2004 Hm... addresses several different things in his post. I think I'll snip his quotes of my message and just quote him. (Does that make sense? LOL) > What do you mean by " a new food " , > Melisma, and how do you " work it > into the diet " ? By 'a new food' I mean a food that you haven't had yet, or at least haven't had since you were diagnosed (esp if you are newly diagnosed) - or even if you've had medication adjusted recently, as I've found that on different doses of my meds, various foods might react differently. Or exercise changes - as mine has recently - and you find that you tolerate a food better than you had before. To work it into the diet... Well, my dietician and I have worked out a meal plan for me - she's fixed a certain number of calories that I should get every day. I don't count calories or carb grams per se, but I do know how many carb grams are supposed to be in a starch choice, a milk choice, a fruit/veggie choice, etc. And we've decided on approximately how many of each choice I should have each day, at each meal or snack. That's my diet. Now, at times I can't get, say, a milk choice in at a particular meal. (Might be because I've run out of milk, and don't have the money to get any more until next week, for eg.) But because I know how many carbs are in a milk choice, I could substitute an equivalent number of carbs from a high-calcium veggie choice for it. Or, perhaps I really would like a small serving of peach cobbler for my dessert when I'm being treated to a birthday lunch (as I was last week) - it's got sugar in it, and crust, so I counted that as at least one carb choice, perhaps two, depending on how large the serving was. And there was some fruit in it. Well, it was a buffet, so I ran all around the serving area to see what I might like to have, and I saw the cobbler. So I made sure that I didn't eat all my carbs and fruits during the meal, but made room for some at the end. And because I wasn't too sure of the exact carb content of the cobbler crust, I made sure that I got a little extra exercise in after lunch to burn off any extra sugar that might have resulted. Or sometimes I really do want to have two fruits at a meal, when my meal plan calls for only one. So I need to subtract one fruit from another meal or snack so that I don't get too many carbs net in one day. So I guess what I mean by 'working a food into the diet' is just figuring out what food group it belongs to, and then how much carb, protein, and/or fat, it contains, so I know what else I can have at that meal, or during the day, so that I can stick to my limits. It adds a flexibility to my diet that helps me not get bored with what I eat, and get a variety of foods and nutrients that I might not otherwise. > The idea of " working a new food > into the diet " is a new one on me. > I cannot even remember seeing a > new food in years, everything is > pretty much the same as it has > always been around here! I don't know what kinds of produce, or food products you may have where you live. But I've personally discovered that I love trying new things. For example, I spent a year in Korea last year, and was always trying new stuff - daikon radish, fresh or pickled, has become a favourite of mine, as have kimchi and doenjang paste, to name a few things. If you can't find new stuff in your regular grocery shops, try going to foreign food shops, restaurants that specialize in a cuisine you've never tried before, or making friends with people from cultures you've never rubbed shoulders with - once I had a student who was Greek (this was before I'd discovered the joys of Greek restaurants), who brought me several genuine Greek recipes to try. Look online for new recipes. Be adventuresome. Just 'cause we are diabetic doesn't mean we have to have a boring gastronomic life! > OK, I don't know what your circum- > stances are but if you were a usual > NIDD type 2 isn't that a lot of tests, > 4 a day? In Germany, the health > insurance normally pays for 100 > strips a quarter, so one a day, and > that is usually considered > sufficient since they don't expect > a type 2 to test every day if in > good control. You must have a good > insurance? My wife tests about 5 > times in 2 days as she has > gastroparesis and I give her some > of my strips. Well, I speculate that my provincial medical coverage is pretty good. Here in Canada everyone must have government health insurance, which varies from province to province in terms of premiums and coverage. I'm in British Columbia, on the West Coast. There are a few things it doesn't cover, or covers only limited amounts of. Like chiropractors and podiatrists, I know of for sure. Once you are covered by BC Medical, then you get your meds and strips via Pharmacare. Pharmacare has a graduated system based on your income that determines how much of your meds and strips are covered by you, and how much by them. My income last year was such that I pay 30% of those costs, up to $200 for a year - they pay the rest. If I'd have had more income, I'd have to kick in more. But what that means is, within reason, I can get all the strips I need - because I've reached the $200 mark long ago. I was taught that the more I can test, the more I can keep my sugars in line. And the more that I can avoid complications due to sugar fluctuations, the better off I'll be in the long run. (I've also been told that I personally don't *need* to test more than once a day if I'm in good control, but I feel like I need to test more, especially when adjusting meds, experiencing lots of stress, exercising more, or, as I've said, eating new foods. And testing more even when I'm not in those situations, just makes me feel better about myself and how I'm caring for myself.) > If you are referring to treatment, > then I agree. But the principles > of nutrition are not tailored to > individuals, not over here at any > rate, but quantities are determined > according to age groups, sex, > whether pregnant or lactating, body > weight and things like that, but > apart from special cases of > intolerance or allergies, the > official nutritional recommendations > are applied to everybody alike. Oh no, I agree that principles of nutrition are the same for everyone, tailored to their general circumstances. What I'm concerned with is that if we are told we must not eat such and such a food because it is 'bad for diabetics', that is being too broad. Certain diabetics may well be able to deal with that food, whereas others may not. And to deny the person who *can* deal with it, the nutritional value that it offers, just because another person can't, is just... well, I don't feel comfortable with the idea. > > Test yourself to make sure that > > your body is dealing with the > > food you eat, ... > > OK, so that is where we differ. I > don't do that. I run on autopilot > and trust that the system and my > medication are taking care of it. > > If something was radically wrong > then I reckon that it would show > up at my next HbA1c and I cannot > see me hand-operating my metabolism > with only a BG meter to go on. As you probably know, an HBA1C reading measures your mean blood sugar levels for a three month period. So my endocrinologist orders one every three months. In my view, that's just too long a time to go by without knowing what's happening in my body. I'd rather micro-manage it than to realize after three months that I'm doing something wrong and maybe by that time there's been some damage to my eyes or my feet or worse. Indeed, I've had many lows where I didn't feel any symptoms, but when I tested before my meal, there it was. For a period of a week, several times, I had excessive highs or lows that I couldn't detect without a meter test - and when I called my doctor about them, he immediately adjusted my meds to correct them. And now that I'm exercising daily at Curves, I'm having to adjust meds almost daily to avoid lows. Actually, it's rather exciting, because I'm able to see results of my exercise almost immediately, instead of waiting a month until measuring day, or three months for the next AIC. But of course, that's me. I understand that others take a different view, for whatever reason, and that's okay, too... > If you are taking so many readings > every day, how do you get away > from the atmosphere of being " sick " > all the time? Doesn't that detract > from your " quality of life " somewhat? Not really. I've just adopted it as one of the rituals of preparing for a meal, the same as washing hands or setting the table. The only thing is, some people around me might object to the sight of the blood on my finger, so I've learnt to take my reading unobtrusively if I'll be eating with people. I don't take the attitude that it's an atmosphere of being 'sick' - rather, that I'm keeping myself from *getting* sick. I've had some terrible results of letting my sugars go - in Korea for eg, during the time when I was adjusting to the new foods and hadn't figured out the best way of incorporating them into my diet, I was bit by a mosquito on my back one night. It was really itchy, of course, so I scratched at it. I opened up a large sore in my back that took several months to heal. Believe me, that was incentive enough to keep testing, and planning my meals better! > > Melisma (slinking shamefaced back > > under her Rock) > > I am intrigued by the " slinking " , > Melisma, and have been meaning to ask > you about it. What is behind that? Ah 'To slink' can mean to go quietly, without much commotion. When I wrote that last post, I was a little embarrassed (shamefaced) because I had not made something clear in my previous post. So I was signing off quietly in my embarassment. The Rock is sort of an online trademark of mine - in my signatures I always mention it, and what I'm doing under, on, in front of, etc, it. On some lists, I'm known as The Girl With The Rock, and sometimes when other listmates make a mistake and are embarrassed they will ask if they can come hide under Melisma's Rock. It's just an ongoing online gag Best, Melisma (under her Rock, wondering what she should have for a bedtime snack, so she won't have a midnight low...) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 29, 2004 Report Share Posted June 29, 2004 > that's interesting. where i go, > while regimens are being worked out, > one tests 7 times a day minimum. > more when exercising or driving at > an usual time. i'm type 1, ... Hi, , thank you for the reply. I can imagine testing frequently when using insulin because of the hypo risk .... > ... but that seems to go for both > types. .... but I still cannot see the need for type 2s taking oral medication (for which there is no real hypo risk) to measure so frequently. > ... when things are worked out, > then it goes to 4 a day min. That still seems to me to be excessive for type 2s on oral med- ication. If I measured so often that would mean I would be col- lecting measurements at the rate of 28 a week. What am I going to do with all that information? It just seems like overkill to me! A blood glucose measurement is always invasive and I thought that good medical practice was to reduce invasive treatments to a minimum. So I guess my question really is, what is the *minimum* number of measurements for a type 2 on oral medication and what tangible advantage is obtained by making more than that? At the moment, I am making on average 3 a week, mostly fasting BG, and my physician is satisfied with that. > they did some studies, though, > that showed intensive management > made a huge difference in > complication rates, and also in > reducing existing problems. As I understand it, intensive management refers to close control with insulin to enable a lower HbA1c to be obtained without increased hypo risk. I don't see how type 2s on oral medication can be intensively managed, though. > ... however, i know it's > definitely not the standard > program. my insurance definitely > had to be persuaded to pay for > so many test strips. Ah! OK, so that would be an explanation: it could have been a special program to collect information for a study. I have heard that physicians in North America habitually prescribe significantly higher doses of oral blood glucose-reducing medication than do physicians in Europe and I was wondering if the same generosity applies to their recommendations for BG testing frequency. Regards Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 29, 2004 Report Share Posted June 29, 2004 > By 'a new food' I mean a food > that you haven't had yet, or at > least haven't had since you were > diagnosed ... Hi, Melisma! What a terrific posting! You sure have packed a lot of information in there, thanks a lot! > ... if you've had medication > adjusted recently, as I've found > that on different doses of my > meds, ... OK, but how often does oral medi- cation get adjusted? Once every 2 to 3 years? That would be a special case and I would probably make some extra measurements then, too. > ... various foods might react > differently. Or exercise changes - > as mine has recently - and you > find that you tolerate a food > better than you had before. I long ago found that the blood glucose change made by exercise is of short duration (15 minutes or so) and never sent me anywhere near a hypo so in my case at least, exercise does not justify a test strip. The long-term improvement from regular exercise takes place over months and shows up better on the HbA1c than on individual BG readings, I found. As for " tolerating food " , I don't have any food intolerances that I ever noticed and if I did then I guess they would show up in other ways than as elevated blood glucose! > To work it into the diet... > Well, my dietician and I have > worked out a meal plan for me - > she's fixed a certain number of > calories that I should get every > day. I don't count calories or > carb grams per se, but I do know > how many carb grams are supposed > to be in a starch choice, a milk > choice, a fruit/veggie choice, etc. > And we've decided on approximately > how many of each choice I should > have each day, at each meal or > snack. That's my diet. Now, at > times I can't get, say, a milk > choice in at a particular meal. OK, now I am beginning to understand! For me, you are describing life on a different planet! I do monitor my food closely and calculate what it was I ate in terms of calories and macronutrients, fiber and water as an average for the week or so as a part of my weight-reduction program. But I don't plan anything in advance, apart from buying only " healthy " (i.e. fresh) food so what we eat is limited to what we have bought. I am convinced that the whole deal is decided in the supermarket - whatever we buy gets eaten sooner or later, what we leave behind in the super- market we can't eat anyway! It is a quite different nutritional philosophy, isn't it? You plan meal- by-meal and we plan week-by-week! Since the effects of nutrition are very, very, slow, I reckon that a weekly average is all I need to know. You seem to me to be out to hand-steer your complete metabolism! I trust in millions of years of evolution to do the job! > Or, perhaps I really would like > a small serving of peach cobbler > for my dessert when I'm being > treated to a birthday lunch (as > I was last week) - it's got sugar > in it, and crust, so I counted > that as at least one carb choice, > perhaps two, depending on how large > the serving was. And there was > some fruit in it. Oh, man! You must have been the life and soul of that party! One small serving of anything at all for a birthday party is not going to upset anything, especially since you are otherwise so strict. That is what I meant by " quality of life " ! > So I made sure that I didn't eat > all my carbs and fruits during the > meal, but made room for some at > the end. And because I wasn't too > sure of the exact carb content of > the cobbler crust, I made sure that > I got a little extra exercise in > after lunch to burn off any extra > sugar that might have resulted. But you weren't taking BG readings before and after everything, were you, Melisma? At your own birthday party? Tell me you weren't, please! > Or sometimes I really do want to > have two fruits at a meal, when my > meal plan calls for only one. So > I need to subtract one fruit from > another meal or snack so that I > don't get too many carbs net in one > day. Did your dietician tell you that each day counts for itself and that you cannot average out over a week to ten days or so? If so, just for me, would you please ask her the next time you meet what the evidence for that is? It goes against all the physiology that I ever learned. Our body has scarcely changed at all from the days when food supply varied considerably from one day to the next and can store everything it needs to cover quite long periods of short supply. The only thing we cannot store and average out over days and weeks is water, but eating 2000 kcals one day and eating 1000 kcals the next is not practically any different from eating 1500 kcals on each day and is certainly about as natural as you can get. If your dietician has a good explanation to the contrary, I am just burning up to read it! > So I guess what I mean by 'working > a food into the diet' is just > figuring out what food group it > belongs to, and then how much carb, > protein, and/or fat, it contains, > so I know what else I can have at > that meal, or during the day, so > that I can stick to my limits. Yes, I now understand what it means but I don't see any nutritional reason for doing that. Now you say that you are not only trying to balance out each day but each meal as well, do I have that right? What is the benefit obtained from doing that? And all the time, you are measuring your BG before and after? > ... adds a flexibility to my diet > that helps me not get bored with > what I eat, and get a variety of > foods and nutrients that I might not > otherwise. OK, but it comes across to me as a net loss of flexibility because you can't eat what is immediately available unless it fits into your plan. Now I come to think about it, that might be a good reason to do it your way - you don't ever go completely off the rails and just pig out on something good but you ARE keeping a very tight rein on yourself that I would not be able to put up with for long myself! I have to admire your devotion! > ... But I've personally discovered > that I love trying new things. ... > Be adventuresome. Just 'cause we are > diabetic doesn't mean we have to have > a boring gastronomic life! I agree with you but in the very same way, just because we are diabetic does not mean that we have to punctuate our lives with BG measurements! > ... within reason, I can get all > the strips I need - because I've > reached the $200 mark long ago. I > was taught that the more I can test, > the more I can keep my sugars in > line. To me, that is just like saying that when you have the 'flu, the more often you measure your temperature, the more the symptoms will subside. But it is the medication that combats the symptoms, not the temperature measurement. That seems to be where we differ most. > And the more that I can avoid > complications due to sugar > fluctuations, the better off I'll > be in the long run. As far as I know there is no evidence of a correlation between the number of BG measurements per day and the risk of any particular diabetes complication. Nor, as far as I know, is there any evidence of a correlation between blood glucose " variations " and risk of complications. As far as I know, the only strong correlation is between glycosylation and the risk of certain complications but we do not have a glycosylation meter. There is experimental evidence of a correlation between the area under the elevated-BG-against-time curve and glycosylation but that requires many measurements per incident and averaging over a large number of incidents of elevated BG. That is precisely what the quarterly glycosylated HbA1c measurement does in effect. > I've also been told that I > personally don't *need* to test > more than once a day if I'm in > good control, but I feel like I > need to test more, .... And testing > more even when I'm not in those > situations, just makes me feel > better about myself and how I'm > caring for myself. OK, that is an even better reason! I can't argue with that, that is the very same reason that my wife gives when I nag her about using up test strips at a great rate! > What I'm concerned with is that > if we are told we must not eat > such and such a food because it > is 'bad for diabetics', that is > being too broad. I agree with you there. > As you probably know, an HBA1C > reading measures your mean blood > sugar levels for a three month > period. It measures the weighted average glycosylated Hemoglobin A1c for the red blood cells that you have in your body at the time of the measurement. Since the red blood cells live for 90 to 120 days and are dying by the millions every day and being metabolised out, the glycosylated HbA1c reading is roughly two-thirds from the previous 30 days and one-third from the 60 days before that. > So my endocrinologist orders one > every three months. The same as they do all over the world. > In my view, that's just too long > a time to go by without knowing > what's happening in my body. > I'd rather micro-manage it than to > realize after three months that > I'm doing something wrong ... I believe that fear is ungrounded. Things don't move that quickly without you finding out about it in other ways (fever and other symptoms). > ... and maybe by that time there's > been some damage to my eyes or my > feet or worse. I don't believe that it can change that quickly. When I was diagnosed with Type 2, I had HbA1c of over 13%. When the eye doctor examined me he said that he could see no damage to my retina. When I asked him if that meant I wasn't going to get any, he replied: " How should I know? Come back in 5 years time and I will tell you then. " The condition of your retina has a function similar to the glycosylated HbA1c measurement but is related to your average elevated BG over the previous 5 years. Things don't change very rapidly in that respect. > Indeed, I've had many lows where > I didn't feel any symptoms, but > when I tested before my meal, > there it was. For a period of a > week, several times, I had > excessive highs or lows that I > couldn't detect without a meter > test - and when I called my doctor > about them, he immediately > adjusted my meds to correct them. OK, now I see better. Those are all signs that you do not yet have good control. When you do, those things won't happen to you (so often). You have something to look forward to! > ... I'm having to adjust meds > almost daily to avoid lows. Actually, > it's rather exciting, because I'm > able to see results of my exercise > almost immediately, instead of > waiting a month until measuring day, > or three months for the next AIC. I know the feeling! > The only thing is, some people > around me might object to the sight > of the blood on my finger, so I've > learnt to take my reading > unobtrusively if I'll be eating with > people. Another good reason to give it a miss when eating out! My blood spattered on the white table cloth spoilt many a dinner out when I first started! It is not nice to be left sitting there while everybody else moves to a different table. > I was a little embarrassed (shamefaced) > because I had not made something clear > in my previous post. Oh, man! I would need to have a cave to hide in if I think of all the times I have not made something clear! Melisma, this is the fundamental point about e-mail self-help groups. People might be able to get something useful out of reading other people's posts but they get a hundred times more out of writing something themselves. It doesn't matter a cent if it is incoherent and unclear! What brings the benefit is in getting your thoughts clear in your own head and putting them down in words for the whole world to read if they want to! I am writing all this mainly for my own benefit and I thank you for giving me the opportunity. I hope you got something out of it in return. Don't worry about being unclear - I wish I could be as clear! > On some lists, I'm known as The Girl > With The Rock, and sometimes when > other listmates make a mistake and > are embarrassed they will ask if > they can come hide under Melisma's Rock. That is very nice! I like it! I would ask you to save a place for me but I don't feel embarrassed very often these days and I probably would not fit in! Regards Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 29, 2004 Report Share Posted June 29, 2004 > > ... but that seems to go for both > > types. > > ... but I still cannot see the need > for type 2s taking oral medication > (for which there is no real hypo > risk) to measure so frequently. I'm only going to comment on this statement, . As a matter of fact, there *are* oral medications that type 2s take which mimic insulin, and which can cause lows - I'm on one, glyburide. At times I have a terrible problem with lows, and my frequent testing has prevented some nasty results. However, I know from my time in Korea that treatments vary from place to place - I couldn't refill my glyburide prescriptions in a Korean pharmacy, and had to have my mother send it to me from Canada. Melisma (shutting up for a while - she hopes! - here under her Rock) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 29, 2004 Report Share Posted June 29, 2004 hi derek! yes, i definitely go to a research hospital (they just did some islet cell transplants as a matter of fact). but in a way, here in the U.S., it's all a muddle as to what is and isn't experimental, what is and isn't *good standard care.* the studies they did were so conclusive, my hospital considers the experimental standard and everything else substandard or just bad. healthcare is incredibly variable over here. i'd say it's a fact that there are many doctors out there prescribing overdoses / wrong doses / wrong meds all together. in my week long education class (which was only the first part and also unusual), i met a man who had been prescribed *seizure doses* of insulin. he'd been blacking out and waking up with blood streaming out of his nose. i've known folks to be prescribed insulin and sent home without any dosing guidelines. people came from very far because of such *standard care.* anyways, where i go, they define intensive management as frequent testing and having a diabetic care team, among other things. which is another thing, a lot of people only see a single general practitioner and zero specialists. not even a dietician. there are oral meds that can make one go low, i think melissa mentioned them. there is the acute danger of acute lows - but i think the other reason my med facility wants frequent testing is because the HbA1c is an average. so, for instance, one could have a lot of liveable highs and lows and the test would look just fine, but the reality is a different picture. they are looking to catch anything as soon as possible, see if the medication is really right, and i'd say enabling patients to do it themselves. and that's yet another thing, also learned a lot of doctors will settle for HbA1c's of 9+ and so forth. there is / has been an expectation that diabetes will *progress,* that the complications are diabetes itself. so people are set up for them, not realizing how directly correlated the complications are with management. suppose i could go on. have heard a lot of horror stories and experienced some. i personally would not leave anything up to our medical system if it can be avoided. and actually, you know, my quality of life hasn't changed at all. it's quite surprising. i flash the gear, it's all over in a few seconds, and it's like nothing happened. really, i'd like an *ooh and ahh* for my cool meter. lol! ok. better stop, before i right a book! rach > As I understand it, intensive > management refers to close control > with insulin to enable a lower > HbA1c to be obtained without > increased hypo risk. I don't see > how type 2s on oral medication > can be intensively managed, > though. > > > ... however, i know it's > > definitely not the standard > > program. my insurance definitely > > had to be persuaded to pay for > > so many test strips. > > Ah! OK, so that would be an > explanation: it could have been a > special program to collect > information for a study. > > I have heard that physicians in > North America habitually prescribe > significantly higher doses of oral > blood glucose-reducing medication > than do physicians in Europe and I > was wondering if the same generosity > applies to their recommendations > for BG testing frequency. > > Regards > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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