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Peregrine Took

(7,511 posts)
Tue May 30, 2023, 01:36 PM May 2023

Medicare only pays for one AC1 test every 3 months?

My husband had a high blood sugar reading on a blood panel test and is now pricking his finger every morning getting different results. His doc today told him he has to come back when the 3 months are up.

He's going to an internist but I think he should go to a endocrinologist.

Thanks.

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Medicare only pays for one AC1 test every 3 months? (Original Post) Peregrine Took May 2023 OP
Yes. It kind of makes sense since an A1C is a measure of blood sugar over 90 days. rsdsharp May 2023 #1
A1C. hippywife May 2023 #2
The A1c I_UndergroundPanther May 2023 #3
Excellent that 90 days is the magic number. Good for the doctor. jimfields33 May 2023 #4
Frequent A1C testing doesn't tell you much Warpy May 2023 #5

rsdsharp

(10,254 posts)
1. Yes. It kind of makes sense since an A1C is a measure of blood sugar over 90 days.
Tue May 30, 2023, 01:47 PM
May 2023

That said, I went to my doctor just short of the 90 days and was told the same thing. I didn’t want to have to come back in a few days, and just paid the cost of the test out of pocket. It was $30.

hippywife

(22,767 posts)
2. A1C.
Tue May 30, 2023, 01:47 PM
May 2023

It covers it every three months because the test is a three month average, so there's no sense in doing it more often than that.

I_UndergroundPanther

(12,952 posts)
3. The A1c
Tue May 30, 2023, 02:01 PM
May 2023

Measures your overall blood sugar levels based on the turnover of your red blood cells. When the old cells die off at around 3 months you can detect the average by testing the sugar level of the new cells.
So 2-3 months could be a little soon,based on the turnover of the blood cells.

jimfields33

(19,257 posts)
4. Excellent that 90 days is the magic number. Good for the doctor.
Tue May 30, 2023, 02:57 PM
May 2023

Sounds like a brilliant well informed doctor. Knows how things work.

Warpy

(113,131 posts)
5. Frequent A1C testing doesn't tell you much
Tue May 30, 2023, 04:08 PM
May 2023

since this is a lab value that takes a long time to budge. It reflects a long term trend rather than short term changes. His glucose levels will tell you if the short term changes are having a good effect.

That's why the standard of care is to check the A1C every three months.

An internist is perfectly capable of caring for a type II diabetic who is keeping his sugar under decent control and can be one stop shopping for a variety of other issues. An endocrinologist needs to be brought in when sugar is resistant to control or is being controlled but with periods of bottoming out. Complications such as foot ulcers or kidney disease also mean it's endocrinologist time. An endocrinologist might be brought in if he's hospitalized with an infection, something that increases blood sugar levels and makes them more difficult to control temporarily.

Most uncomplicated cases of Type II diabetes never require an endocrinologist. If one is indicated, his internist will be the first to know.

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