AndBreathe
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- In remission from Type 2
Moderator Note: This side conversation about the merits of low calorie vs low carb approaches was split away from a newbie thread to prevent it being overwhelmed - https://forum.diabetes.org.uk/boards/threads/getting-myself-in-a-mess.106308/
In my view, there is no need for any restrictive diet programme for a newly diagnosed individual to make a difference to their lives with diabetes.
If that person's way of eating is adversely influencing their blood sugar, then eating starvation levels for weeks on end will not help them understand what is causing their issues. It may aid losing weight, but it does not educate them in terms of their longer term personal wellbeing management.
In my view, it is more advantageous to educate and adjust the lifestyle (which is likely to involve adjusting eating routines, and may include exercise).
So, so often I have observed individuals counting down to the end of their 12-week programme and working out what their treat will be. More often than not, that treat is sometime likely to be unhelpful to their longer term cause.
I have also observed folks thinking they'd sorted things because they did the 12-week programme, only to revert to an active T2 status down the line.
Of course, anyone can undo good work, but embedding healthy patterns early on, at a time when the individual is most likely motivated seems to make sense to me. After all, there is much agreement amongst the members here that maintaining a good healthy position is trickier than achieving that goal. (That goal could be blood glucose numbers, weight loss, exercise, stopping smoking, reducing alcohol intake or any combination of the foregoing.)
You can reverse your diabetes. And if you do that soon, and keep it reversed, there will be minimal effect on your life expectancy; in fact you can make yourself healthier than you have ever been.
Get yourself onto the NHS Low Calorie Diet Programme: https://www.england.nhs.uk/diabetes/treatment-care/diabetes-remission/ . It is now being rolled out to the whole of England: https://www.england.nhs.uk/2023/04/nhs-to-expand-soups-and-shakes-for-people-with-type-2-diabetes/ .
The eligibility requirements are:
"be aged 18 – 65 years"-- tick;
"have a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes within the last 6 years"-- tick; and
"have a BMI over 27 kg/m2 (where individuals are from White ethnic groups) or over 25 kg/m2 (where individuals are from Black, Asian and other ethnic groups)"-- tick. Your BMI is over 35, which means you are officially obese; even if you hadn't developed Type 2, your health is being undermined and your life expectancy shortened by your obesity.
Just do it. Ask your GP about the NHS Low Calorie Diet Programme. Demand to be referred to it.
There are a number of Type 2s on this forum who have successfully reversed their diabetes. You can too.
You may wonder: Why do I, as a Type 1, care about this? ... Because there is no cure for Type 1. It is not possible to reverse Type 1. I wish I were in your position-- because then I could do something about it. You are actually lucky; take advantage of your good luck. All best wishes, and do let us know how you get on!
In my view, there is no need for any restrictive diet programme for a newly diagnosed individual to make a difference to their lives with diabetes.
If that person's way of eating is adversely influencing their blood sugar, then eating starvation levels for weeks on end will not help them understand what is causing their issues. It may aid losing weight, but it does not educate them in terms of their longer term personal wellbeing management.
In my view, it is more advantageous to educate and adjust the lifestyle (which is likely to involve adjusting eating routines, and may include exercise).
So, so often I have observed individuals counting down to the end of their 12-week programme and working out what their treat will be. More often than not, that treat is sometime likely to be unhelpful to their longer term cause.
I have also observed folks thinking they'd sorted things because they did the 12-week programme, only to revert to an active T2 status down the line.
Of course, anyone can undo good work, but embedding healthy patterns early on, at a time when the individual is most likely motivated seems to make sense to me. After all, there is much agreement amongst the members here that maintaining a good healthy position is trickier than achieving that goal. (That goal could be blood glucose numbers, weight loss, exercise, stopping smoking, reducing alcohol intake or any combination of the foregoing.)
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