Do u have any suggestions as to what I should bring up or say? Questions I should ask maybe?
You'll want a vet who:
1) Supports home testing of blood glucose and is OK about using a human glucometer.
2) Supports feeding a low carbohydrate, over the counter, canned or raw cat food.
3) Is either up to date, or willing to do the homework to become up to date on feline diabetes and common comorbidities (pancreatitis, IBD (inflammatory bowel disease), CRF (chronic renal failure), EPI (exocrine pancreatic insufficiency), infection, etc.
4) If up to date, is familiar with the use of ProZinc, PZI, Lantus, and/or Levemir IN CATS; ask how they determine initial dosing and how often the dose is given. This may be based on lean body weight (verify it, if they say based on weight as some vets forget this, per Dr Pierson) or may start low at 0.5 units. Dosing should be twice a day at 12 hour intervals.
5) If currently treating diabetic cats, ask how long they usually survive (should be several years, barring other conditions)
6) Knows how long the current diabetic cats have survived since diagnosis and how many have gone into remission.
7) Has pricing you can live with - check office visit fee, vaccine fee, CBC and chemistry fee, etc. Ask how often they have you bring the diabetic cat in and for what reasons (if you are home testing, you can do curves and averages at home, and the cat doesn't get 'regulated' at the vet office where stress makes the numbers unreliable)
These topics were compiled from suggestions by members of the Feline Diabetes Message Board(FDMB).
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1BqrojKe9oBVAoexL59pUWidEd7viNmxSqW5l2IBTWjY/edit
i would also read this its fairly new
http://jfm.sagepub.com/content/17/3/235.full.pdf html
also you dont want to just get the free blood glucose monitors because the strips could be more expensive and the monitor may not have a good rating. if u have walmart the relion brand meters are what a few members including myself use