Northerner
Admin (Retired)
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
If you have Type 2 diabetes or are at risk of it, should you be eating a low-carbohydrate diet?
This hot topic flared again last week when an international group of researchers published an article in the journal Nutrition. In the article, Dr Richard Feinman, an American professor of biochemistry, and 25 colleagues present evidence that they say points to a carbohydrate-restricted diet as the default diet for people with Type 2 diabetes. But they claim that at present, health professionals and organisations are biased against low-carb diets, and often discourage patients from following them.
So are they right? Would everyone with Type 2 diabetes benefit from switching to a low-carbohydrate diet? And is the health establishment conspiring to keep the truth about low-carb diets from us?
http://www.diabeteschoices.org.uk/2...es-and-type-2-diabetes-how-low-should-you-go/
It does prompt the question of why so few studies have been done on this when there seems to be so much anecdotal evidence around on forums and elsewhere that it works. Is it because most research of this kind is funded by Big Pharma who don't really want to reduce their market opportunities by endorsing something that might reduce or eliminate the need for lucrative medications? Just sayin' 🙄
This hot topic flared again last week when an international group of researchers published an article in the journal Nutrition. In the article, Dr Richard Feinman, an American professor of biochemistry, and 25 colleagues present evidence that they say points to a carbohydrate-restricted diet as the default diet for people with Type 2 diabetes. But they claim that at present, health professionals and organisations are biased against low-carb diets, and often discourage patients from following them.
So are they right? Would everyone with Type 2 diabetes benefit from switching to a low-carbohydrate diet? And is the health establishment conspiring to keep the truth about low-carb diets from us?
http://www.diabeteschoices.org.uk/2...es-and-type-2-diabetes-how-low-should-you-go/
It does prompt the question of why so few studies have been done on this when there seems to be so much anecdotal evidence around on forums and elsewhere that it works. Is it because most research of this kind is funded by Big Pharma who don't really want to reduce their market opportunities by endorsing something that might reduce or eliminate the need for lucrative medications? Just sayin' 🙄