CONTROLLING YOUR DIABETES: MEDICAL EXAMINATIONS AND CHECK-UPS
Whatever you decide to do, you should be seen regularly by someone who checks up on your glucose balance, your diabetes and your general health. Diabetes is so common that there should be a doctor with this special interest near you. If you have no family doctor or have just moved to a new area, ask your local diabetic association for a list of doctors’ names and clinics. Better still, if you are moving, ask your previous adviser to contact someone they know in your new area.
In the 1980′s the department in which I worked arranged special clinic sessions to convert everyone taking insulin in the Oxford area to the U100 strength. Because pharmacists notified us of every diabetic for whom they filled a prescription for insulin, we discovered a group of people on insulin who had not been attending the clinic. They gave various reasons for not attending: some had moved, others were too busy, or had missed an appointment and not received another, or not sought one. Some of these people had severe diabetic tissue damage. If you miss an appointment, do not expect another to appear automatically. Most clinics and diabetes centers chase up non-attendees but notification of your appointment may have got lost in the mail or you may have forgotten to tell the clinic your new address. If you do not get a follow-up appointment, write or telephone and ask for another, or ask your family doctor to do this for you. Do not wait for five years wondering why nothing is happening – or put it off until tomorrow.
Some aspects of diabetes require special care, for example, pregnancy, proliferative retinopathy and renal disease. If this applies to you, your diabetes adviser will be able to tell you if this is one of his or her specialties; if not, he will arrange for you to see someone who is expert in this field. It is worth being prepared to travel to another city for expert care. Your diabetes adviser may also ask for a colleague’s help if you have other forms of tissue damage such as peripheral vascular disease or heart trouble.
Most people find going to doctors, clinics and hospitals worrying and there is a natural tendency to sit quietly and just do as you are told and speak when you are spoken to. But it is your diabetes and your body, and it is important that you take an active interest in what is happening to you. Asking questions is not troublemaking or being difficult. You must be involved in your diabetes and know what is going on, so that you can work with your advisers to keep as healthy as possible. They cannot guess what you are thinking. I must stress again, if you are worried about something, or fed up or confused, please ask; that is what we are there for.
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DIABETES
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Tags: Diabetes