Controlling type 2 diabetes with diet alone
I live in the UK and have recently been diagnosed type 2 diabetic. I have yet to start testing but have made an attempt at diet.
What are the chances of my being able to control my levels with diet alone?
The Mayo Clinic Connect was my pick as I enjoyed my visit at Rochester in 1959.
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Hi @chesterc . I'm afraid that the answer to your question is "it depends." It depends on a lot of things - how far progressed your illness is, how high your sugars are, and how much your pancreas is still functioning. If your doctor hasn't already suggested it, you might ask for a referral to a dietician who specializes in diabetes. (In the U.S. we call them a "diabetes educator"). They can be really helpful at helping you figure out how to eat in this new way and balance what you eat with your blood sugar test results. They can also help you identify which foods impact your blood sugar the most and therefore need to be eaten less frequently. Some type II diabetics can manage their blood sugar with diet alone, some with diet and exercise, and others need medication.
In my case, I had to be on medication for several years. Right now I am able to manage with diet only. That probably won't last forever, but I'm enjoying it while it lasts. 🙂
Best of luck to you.
Hi, interesting, what event happened or what did u do to be able to get off meds?
My sugars were not super high to begin with (but high enough to qualify as diabetic). I eat a very low carb diet. Also, for some reason, going through menopause seemed to stabilize the highs and lows that I was having, so while I still had to work at keeping my blood sugars down, I didn't need the medication to help stabilize my sugars. I also was running several times a week, although I'm not doing that now so it may be a matter of time before I need to take metformin again.
Same as mine, I can control day time sugars but it's the fasting that's high, they still classify it as diabetes. I also walk 3-4 miles 4 times a week.Im male so that's different, I think I'm going tru mental pause though especially after the diagnosis.im on metformin and a sugar eliminator pill.Its trying on the mind.
@chesterc I was diagnosed in the early 2000s. Initially the doctor I was seeing put me on insulin just to make sure it was controlled. Then I was on metformin for a little while but my numbers are good so I am not on anything now, have not been for a number of years. My A1C is always below 6, has even been below 5, and that is just with diet. When I was post surgery and taking prednisone my numbers skyrocket and I had to use insulin until they reduced the prednisone. I am still taking a small dose of prednisone daily but my numbers are fine now. Unless your diabetes is severe, diet alone may be able to control it.
JK
Thank you John and to the others who offered advice. I guess that the answer is to keep calm and carry on.
Without self testing I am very much in the dark so that should be a priority, I will lake an effort to read as much as possible ( thanks for the link) and press ahead with the diet. I too have an occasional cookie and have yet to convince myself that this will put me on the slippery slope. Otherwise our diet seems very good to me.
I will watch out for further advice.
@chesterc Chesterc, one of the problems many of us face with diabetes is the cost of the medication. Insulin, if you have to buy your own at standard prices, can run as much as $6,000 per month. But thankfully there are alternatives.First thing you need to know is that the pharmacist is supposedly doing something illegal if they offer, without being asked, the least expensive alternative. However, if the customer asks, they are required to tell about alternatives. One great alternative, at least for me, is the two Novolin R and Novolin N, with many chain pharmacies sell at about $25 per small bottle. The R is quick acting, and the N is longer lasting, and takes longer to start work in the body. But even better, if you have good pharma insurance and can purchase more at a time, the bottles cost about $10 each, or about $115 for 12 bottles, about 90 days worth. Ask your pharmacist.
@chesterc I think all of us have an occasional sweet of some sort. They say to just plan it into your daily carbs.
@oldkarl I am amazed at how little I have to pay for pharmaceuticals. Between Medicare and my supplemental I pay very little. For those of you not yet on Medicare, when you do get on it, it will be a blessing. That’s assuming that the current administration does not change things of course.
JK
@contentandwell I am sure the current admin will change things if they can to take more money from po' fokes and put it in the pocket of rich foks.