We are on GP #4 in as many years. Once we moved, one went into boutique practice which we didn’t elect to join after five weeks of calling 2x a week for the letter to the new endo that his office never sent, one moved back east to care for his wife who got cancer, and this recent one seems okay. I think. We’ve only seen him once.
Yes, I understand that. I meant to say Diabetes is learned SOLELY within the field of Endocronology because it deals with their sole focus…the Endocrine system. They specialize in Diabetes because it’s part of the Endocrine system…so any disease (including Diabetes) that falls within the Endocrine system, is their “sole focus”.
So, I wouldn’t expect my FP to have specialized knowledge in any of the areas that make up the Endocrine system: hyperthyroidism, hypothyroidism, diabetes, disorders of menopause, PMS, andropause, pituitary disorders such as growth hormone deficiency and adrenal disorders such as Cushing’s disease or Addison’s disease.
I would expect them to know what these are (maybe) and understand how to spot them or test for them and I would expect them to have a basic knowledge, but that’s as much as I would expect a FP to know. Oh, and perhaps a good referring Endocronologist that I should visit.
I dunno… I’ve never felt like I particularly have benefitted from seeing a diabetes specialist… and my gp is about 10x more responsive to my requests for prescriptions, easier to get an appointment with if I needed something, has a clinic that seems to function pretty flawlessly, which are all things I unfortunately can’t say about the “expert”
Perhaps you just have a faulty memory after having lived with it for so long. When we live with, or have, something for many years, we sometimes forget what it was like in the early days as we were learning. You didn’t start out as a Diabetes super stud.
Perhaps because you have acquired such a vast knowledge yourself over these years that you’ve just surpassed the need to visit an Endo…but that doesn’t say anything about the Endo’s knowledge…it just speaks to yours, imho. There is a point where you can become just as knowledgeable and can be considered an “expert” in the field of Diabetes after having lived with it for years and years. So, after this point, I can see how an Endo may not be very beneficial.
No, but I started out with a family doctor… then later started seeing a specialist. I’m strongly considering going back to the family doc at this point…
Granted he does have a t1 child, and a t2 wife, but from my perspective he gets the job done a lot more effectively than the specialist… I suspect he’s more knowledgeable than the average family doc
The endo may have more specific education on the subject, but in the exam room it’s still just the same “good job keep up the good work, don’t take too much insulin, exercise regularly… “
Well, if you think your FP is a better choice for you, I think that’s great. I just don’t think it’s wise to point people…especially people new to Diabetes to FP’s for Diabetes care. That’s my own personal opinion, mind you. I just think it would be foolish to walk in and ask my Doctor to treat, say, for example, my prostate cancer. Much the same way, it would be foolish to expect them to know how to guide me in the correct management of Diabetes.
It’s by no means an easy disease until you gain some pretty critical insights that FP’s wouldn’t generally have.
I guess I’ve never really gained any insights from the expert though… they didn’t teach me how to mange my blood sugar… it’s not something a doc can teach someone in an appointment… it’s learned through life experience
I learned from reading dozens of books, taking hundreds of pages of notes on how things affect my blood sugar levels, comparing notes with others in venues like this, tens of thousands of bg tests… I can honestly say I’ve never even gotten a helpful tidbit from a physician. CDEs have been helpful when I was first diagnosed, but honestly docs haven’t taught me a single thing… or even tried to
Then you clearly don’t need an Endo. I’ve done all those things also but after months of being lost, alone, frightened for Liam’s life and calling Liams Endo after every high and low in desperation to figure out what I needed to do so I didn’t kill my son.
I don’t need an Endo now as much as I did when I was new to this game but I still value their input because they are trained to recognize potential complications, among other things.
Really depends a lot on where one lives too. Where I’m at there was no diabetes specialist for all history until very recently, just family docs… they were the ones who managed diabetes of all types, so they became reasonably proficient at it, because it was their job… in more populated areas the norm is much more so to refer to specialists than in rural areas… so primary care docs are likely not as good at things like this, because it’s not their job
Like I said… In your case I agree that you don’t need an Endo. I just don’t want to confuse newbies into believing a FP can treat their diabetes…As someone totally new to the disease… Because I truly don’t believe that to be the case.