I have always tended to be overweight
I'm 178 cm tall and for the past 18 months to 2 years my weight has been around 90/91 kg. I'm 70
I seem to have been dieting since last spring (2019)
Fortunately my diabetic control, BP, and so on are good, controlled with Lisinopril, Metformin, Glargine, and Novorapid, but i'd like to reduce those if possible
Over Christmas/New Year I bought & read Roy Taylor's & Michael Mosley's books, and made more of an effort
I tried to follow their schemes, but it was a bit 'home - made' - I bought some meal replacement powder from Holland & Barret
I had, of course, reduced my carb intake already, but I cut it down even further and made up my own sort of low carb - cum- Mediterranean diet
Well now I'm 5 or 6 months into it, and although I've lost some weight, it's not much - I'm about 89kg
I've just had an email from a friend who's a similar age and also has diabetes
He has been following Roy Taylor's diet plan closely, and his weight has gone down from 13st to just under 11st - say a loss of 13kg
He's stopped injecting insulin and now manages with diet & Metformin
So, I thought I'd try putting myself on the official version - and that's when the fun starts!
Once you start Searching t'Net for Roy Taylor, Fast 800, Newcastle Diet there are so many references and Links
Similarly on the powders, shakes and other meal replacement products, There are so many different schemes, diets & powders that it all gets very confusing, never ending and overwhelming very quickly
My friend used Optifast powders, but even on the Newcastle University website - www.ncl.ac.uk - there are several different brands - Kee Diet, Exante, Slim and Save, New you Plan
Has anyone got any comments or recommendations please?
Can I make a couple of comments of my own?
I don't think I could manage on shakes for every meal. I was thinking of something like a shake for breakfast then low cal/low carb meals at other times
I'm not too bothered about the cost - I want to get something done
I think reversing my diabetes is a optimistic; I'd settle for reducing my medication and losing weight. My target is below 85kg, and the closer to 80kg the better
I'm 178 cm tall and for the past 18 months to 2 years my weight has been around 90/91 kg. I'm 70
I seem to have been dieting since last spring (2019)
Fortunately my diabetic control, BP, and so on are good, controlled with Lisinopril, Metformin, Glargine, and Novorapid, but i'd like to reduce those if possible
Over Christmas/New Year I bought & read Roy Taylor's & Michael Mosley's books, and made more of an effort
I tried to follow their schemes, but it was a bit 'home - made' - I bought some meal replacement powder from Holland & Barret
I had, of course, reduced my carb intake already, but I cut it down even further and made up my own sort of low carb - cum- Mediterranean diet
Well now I'm 5 or 6 months into it, and although I've lost some weight, it's not much - I'm about 89kg
I've just had an email from a friend who's a similar age and also has diabetes
He has been following Roy Taylor's diet plan closely, and his weight has gone down from 13st to just under 11st - say a loss of 13kg
He's stopped injecting insulin and now manages with diet & Metformin
So, I thought I'd try putting myself on the official version - and that's when the fun starts!
Once you start Searching t'Net for Roy Taylor, Fast 800, Newcastle Diet there are so many references and Links
Similarly on the powders, shakes and other meal replacement products, There are so many different schemes, diets & powders that it all gets very confusing, never ending and overwhelming very quickly
My friend used Optifast powders, but even on the Newcastle University website - www.ncl.ac.uk - there are several different brands - Kee Diet, Exante, Slim and Save, New you Plan
Has anyone got any comments or recommendations please?
Can I make a couple of comments of my own?
I don't think I could manage on shakes for every meal. I was thinking of something like a shake for breakfast then low cal/low carb meals at other times
I'm not too bothered about the cost - I want to get something done
I think reversing my diabetes is a optimistic; I'd settle for reducing my medication and losing weight. My target is below 85kg, and the closer to 80kg the better
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