[Diabetes-Talk] Mixed Medical News
Veronica Elsea
veronica at laurelcreekmusic.com
Tue Jan 26 20:10:58 UTC 2021
Hi Lisa.
You know, I've lost count of the times when I've said that I think I have it easier being Type 1. People take it seriously. It seems to take beyond forever for the medical establishment to readjust its thinking as we learn new things. Type 2 definitely has a genetic component. I don't believe you bring it on yourself and you deserve to be treated like you matter. I hate this blame game we play. So I definitely don't think you're being negative by expressing frustration with reality. I know professionals who are making a real effort to change the perceptions and the responses and I know professionals who just can't seem to be bothered.
Good for you for caring about yourself. Please remember that we care about you too. Hang in there and keep at it.
Veronica
"Guide Dogs, First Hand", Veronica Elsea's classic album is now available on iTunes, along with other music from her and from the Guide Dog Glee Club.
To learn more, visit:
http://www.laurelcreekmusic.com
Veronica Elsea, Owner
Laurel Creek Music Designs
Santa Cruz, California
Phone: 831-429-6407
-----Original Message-----
From: Diabetes-Talk [mailto:diabetes-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Lisa Belville via Diabetes-Talk
Sent: Tuesday, January 26, 2021 11:50 AM
To: Diabetes Talk for the Blind
Cc: Lisa Belville
Subject: [Diabetes-Talk] Mixed Medical News
Hi, all.
Yesterday I saw my primary care doctor and we went over my latest blood
work. I was pleased and relieved that my A1C dropped, but not pleased
to learn that even though I'm struggling to obtain accurate readings
with my current meter, the prospect of getting the ever-popular
Medicaid/Medicare combo to cover a CGM is very slim. The positive thing
is that my doctor is going to try to get them to fund it. I did tell
her about the need for testing four times a day and that I would have no
problem doing this if the process weren't so wasteful and inaccurate.
She's trying to get me a Libra Freestyle.
The other disturbing thing I learned is that if someone is taking
Metformin, even a large daily dose, and it is controlling the A1C, the
common medical advice is that such a person is now advised that daily
sugar testing isn't necessary. My doctor disagrees with this and wants
me to continue to at least try getting regular readings.
More nuttiness from the medical establishment. I honestly think they
want us Type II people to just die off so they can spend money on
someone who deserves it, like life long smokers who get cancer or COPD.
It's our fault for getting diabetes, so why should we get better
monitoring and better coverage. At least this is how I'm starting to
feel throughout this process. so what if some of us are trying to
better ourselves.
Okay, so I'm not that negative, but it does feel good to share these
thoughts with others who have experienced this attitude before. My
doctor is actually cool with blindness and is open to new methods, and
sometimes that's half the battle.
Lisa
--
Lisa Belville
missktlab1217 at frontier.com
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