The advice I have *always* been given (from way back in 1991) was if you eat fewer carbs you need to take less insulin.
Which is broadly the same thing. The reality, as we all know, is that insulin converts excess blood sugar to fat. So a sensible approach to weight loss is to reduce the intake of foods that raise blood sugar, which then also results in a reduction in insulin intake. The sensible approach to wait loss is to therefore eat less blood-sugar raising foods, which mean you take less insulin, which means you put on less weight. Perhaps I wasn't clear as I could have been in the first instance - my approach to losing weight has been to eat fewer carbs, meaning less insulin. By eating fewer carbs, I can reduce my insulin intake safely, thus reducing my fat storage and promoting fat metabolism. It's a bit chicken and egg, I know!
Eating disorders are FAR more complicated than that, and adding in diabetes to that only complicates things further.
I completely agree eating disorders aren't simple at all. The reason diabetes adds an extra layer of complication is because it's one less automated variable and despite people going on DAFNE and adjusting their doses according to their carb intake, the message is still the same. Diabetes UK still push a ridiculous line that meals should be based around starchy carbs. Other organisations says your diet should be at least 60% starchy carbs! Being able to bolus adequately for a 100g carb meal won't do anything for you in terms of weight management. It's ideal from a blood sugar perspective but no-one seems to discuss the weight implications. Every single conversation I've had with a dietician or doctor about carb intake has always ended in exactly the same way:
Doctor: "Insulin does convert glucose to fat. But you're diabetic so you need to match your insulin intake to your carbs. And your carbs need to be a significant part of of your diet. And you need to watch your weight."
Me: "So if I take less insulin, I'll store less fat."
Doctor: "Well, that will give you higher blood sugar, so that's a bad idea."
Me: "So what if I ate fewer carbs so I'd need less insulin?"
Doctor: "You shouldn't cut down on carbs."
Me: "So how can I cut down on insulin if I'm not supposed to cut down on carbs? How can I possibly then lose weight?"
Doctor: "Eat a low fat diet."
Me: "What's that got to do with insulin?"
Doctor: "Fat is bad."
I'm sorry but that's the advice that's churned out by every single official authority on diabetes. And it's just not good enough. The problem is as long as we keep telling people cutting down on their carbs and their insulin is wrong, you'll end up with the all-or-nothing disaster situation. How on earth is someone supposed to be able to safely work out for themselves to avoid weight gain when they are constantly told by experts to eat before exercise and to do nothing about the two things that have the greatest influence on their weight?
I imagine they try and replicate the situation they were in pre diagnosis, as much of us found ourselves in, where we rapidly lost weight.
Bingo. That's what happens when you tell people that cutting back on carbs is off limits.
Yes, I completely agree that diabulemia and eating disorders are extremely complex mental health issues and the people with these issues need a lot of support and love. But I am convinced that it would be extremely easy to avoid the snowball effect that creates diabulemia, at least. If more T1s were told the truth, by doctors, and were 'allowed' more free rein to develop diet plans beyond the relentless 'have a baked potato with everything', far fewer T1s would develop unhealthy relationships with food and be far happier with their bodies. That won't help those with diabulemia right now but I'm sure it'll help plenty of young people out there feeling they need to lose weight quickly because they simply won't be overweight to start with.