diabetic diet
Is Vegan Food Always Healthy?
"Is Vegan Food Always Healthy?" In my video on flexitarians,
I talk about how the benefits of eating a plant-based diet
are not all-or-nothing. Simple advice to increase
the consumption of plant-derived foods with
parallel reductions in the consumption of foods from
animal sources was found to confer a survival advantage,”
a live-longer advantage. They call it a pro-vegetarian eating
pattern, just moving in that direction, as a more gradual, gentle
doable approach. If you’re dealing with a serious
disease, though, like diabetes, avoiding some problem foods
completely may be easier than attempting to moderate their intake. It’s like clinicians would never tell
alcoholics to simply cut down on alcohol. Avoiding alcohol entirely
is a more effective and, ironically, easier for a problem drinker. Paradoxically, asking patients
to make a large change may be more effective than
making a slow transition. Diet studies show that recommending
more significant changes increases the changes that
patients actually accomplish. It may help to replace the common
advice, ‘all things in moderation’ with ‘big changes beget big results.’ Success breeds success. After a few days or weeks of
major dietary changes, patients are more likely
to see improvements in weight and blood sugar levels— improvements that
reinforce the dietary changes.
Furthermore, they may enjoy other health
benefits of plant-based eating. that may give them further motivation. Those who choose to eat plant-based
for their health say it’s mostly for general wellness and disease
prevention, or to improve their energy levels or immune function. They felt it gave them a sense
of control over their health, helps you feel better emotionally,
improves your overall health, and makes you feel better. Most felt it was very important for
maintaining their health and well-being. For the minority that used it
for a specific health problem, it was mostly for high cholesterol
or weight loss, followed by high blood pressure
and diabetes, with most reporting they felt it helped a great deal. But others choose plant-based diets
for other reasons like animal welfare or global warming, and it looks
like they’re more likely to be eating things like vegan doughnuts,
sugary and fatty foods, compared to those eating
plant-based because of religious or health reasons. I mean the veganist vegan could bake
a cake using soda instead of eggs, with frosting, covered in marshmallow
fluff and chocolate syrup, topped with Oreos, with a side of Doritos
dipped in, vegan bacon grease.
But fruit for dessert… in the form of
Pop Tarts and Krispy Kreme pies. This, is a vegan meal. Yes, plant-based diets have
been recommended to reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes. However, not all plant foods
are necessarily beneficial. Like in that pro-vegetarian scoring
system you got points for eating potato chips and French fries,
just because they were technically plant-based, but Harvard researchers
wanted to examine the association of not only an overall plant-based diet,
but both healthy and unhealthy versions. So, they created the same kind
of pro-vegetarian scoring system weighted towards any sort
of plant-based foods, and against animal foods and then also
created a healthful plant-based diet index, where at least some whole
plant foods took precedence and Coca-Cola was no longer
considered a plant.
Then lastly, they created an
unhealthful plant-based diet index by assigning positive scores
to processed plant-based junk, and negative scoring healthier
foods and animal foods. And then they found that a more
plant-based diet in general was good for reducing diabetes risk, but eating
especially healthy plant-based foods did better, nearly cutting risk in half, while those eating more
unhealthy plant foods did worse. Now, but is that because they
were also eating more animal foods? People often eat burgers with their fries; so, they separated out the
effects of healthy plant foods, less healthy plant foods,
and animal foods.
And healthy plant foods were
protectively associated, animal foods were
detrimentally associated, and less healthy plant foods were more
neutral when it came to diabetes risk. Here’s what the graph looks like:
higher diabetes risk with more and more animal foods, no protection
whatsoever with junky plant foods, and lower and lower diabetes risk
associated with more and more healthy whole plant foods in the diet. So, they conclude that yes, plant-
based diets are associated with substantially lower risk of
developing type 2 diabetes, but it may not be enough to just
lower the intake of animal foods, but also less healthy plant foods as well..
Video Transcript – As found on YouTube
Is Vegan Food Always Healthy?
"Is Vegan Food Always Healthy?" In my video on flexitarians,
I talk about how the benefits of eating a plant-based diet
are not all-or-nothing. Simple advice to increase
the consumption of plant-derived foods with
parallel reductions in the consumption of foods from
animal sources was found to confer a survival advantage,”
a live-longer advantage. They call it a pro-vegetarian eating
pattern, just moving in that direction, as a more gradual, gentle
doable approach. If you’re dealing with a serious
disease, though, like diabetes, avoiding some problem foods
completely may be easier than attempting to moderate their intake. It’s like clinicians would never tell
alcoholics to simply cut down on alcohol. Avoiding alcohol entirely
is a more effective and, ironically, easier for a problem drinker. Paradoxically, asking patients
to make a large change may be more effective than
making a slow transition. Diet studies show that recommending
more significant changes increases the changes that
patients actually accomplish.
It may help to replace the common
advice, ‘all things in moderation’ with ‘big changes beget big results.’ Success breeds success. After a few days or weeks of
major dietary changes, patients are more likely
to see improvements in weight and blood sugar levels— improvements that
reinforce the dietary changes. Furthermore, they may enjoy other health
benefits of plant-based eating. that may give them further motivation. Those who choose to eat plant-based
for their health say it’s mostly for general wellness and disease
prevention, or to improve their energy levels or immune function.
They felt it gave them a sense
of control over their health, helps you feel better emotionally,
improves your overall health, and makes you feel better. Most felt it was very important for
maintaining their health and well-being. For the minority that used it
for a specific health problem, it was mostly for high cholesterol
or weight loss, followed by high blood pressure
and diabetes, with most reporting they felt it helped a great deal. But others choose plant-based diets
for other reasons like animal welfare or global warming, and it looks
like they’re more likely to be eating things like vegan doughnuts,
sugary and fatty foods, compared to those eating
plant-based because of religious or health reasons. I mean the veganist vegan could bake
a cake using soda instead of eggs, with frosting, covered in marshmallow
fluff and chocolate syrup, topped with Oreos, with a side of Doritos
dipped in, vegan bacon grease.
But fruit for dessert… in the form of
Pop Tarts and Krispy Kreme pies. This, is a vegan meal. Yes, plant-based diets have
been recommended to reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes. However, not all plant foods
are necessarily beneficial. Like in that pro-vegetarian scoring
system you got points for eating potato chips and French fries,
just because they were technically plant-based, but Harvard researchers
wanted to examine the association of not only an overall plant-based diet,
but both healthy and unhealthy versions. So, they created the same kind
of pro-vegetarian scoring system weighted towards any sort
of plant-based foods, and against animal foods and then also
created a healthful plant-based diet index, where at least some whole
plant foods took precedence and Coca-Cola was no longer
considered a plant. Then lastly, they created an
unhealthful plant-based diet index by assigning positive scores
to processed plant-based junk, and negative scoring healthier
foods and animal foods. And then they found that a more
plant-based diet in general was good for reducing diabetes risk, but eating
especially healthy plant-based foods did better, nearly cutting risk in half, while those eating more
unhealthy plant foods did worse.
Now, but is that because they
were also eating more animal foods? People often eat burgers with their fries; so, they separated out the
effects of healthy plant foods, less healthy plant foods,
and animal foods. And healthy plant foods were
protectively associated, animal foods were
detrimentally associated, and less healthy plant foods were more
neutral when it came to diabetes risk. Here’s what the graph looks like:
higher diabetes risk with more and more animal foods, no protection
whatsoever with junky plant foods, and lower and lower diabetes risk
associated with more and more healthy whole plant foods in the diet. So, they conclude that yes, plant-
based diets are associated with substantially lower risk of
developing type 2 diabetes, but it may not be enough to just
lower the intake of animal foods, but also less healthy plant foods as well.
Video Transcript – As found on YouTube
Flashback Friday: The Best Diet for Diabetes
"The Best Diet for Diabetes" There are all sorts of different scoring
systems to rate diet quality. My favorite, for its simplicity, is the
dietary phytochemical index: a fancy name for a simple concept. It's just the percentage of your calories
from whole plant foods, so 0 to 100. The average American diet
has a score of 12. Twelve out of a hundred; so, like on a
scale of one to ten, our diet is a one. You can split people up based on how they
score, and show how the higher you score the better your metabolic markers
when it comes to diabetes risk. There appears to be like this stepwise
drop in insulin resistance and insulin-producing beta-cell dysfunction
as you eat more and more plant-based. And that highest group was
only scoring about 30, less than a third of their diet
was whole plant foods, but better than the lowest, which was
down around the standard American diet.
No wonder diets centered around
plants, emphasizing legumes— beans, split peas,
chickpeas and lentils— whole grains, vegetables,
fruits, nuts and seeds, and discouraging most or all animal
products are especially potent in preventing type 2 diabetes, and as a little bonus has been associated
with much lower rates of obesity, hypertension, hyperlipidemia,
cardiovascular mortality, and cancer. And not just preventing type 2 diabetes
but treating it as well. A systematic review and meta-analysis
found that the consumption of vegetarian diets is associated
with improved blood sugar control, but how much improved?
Here's one of the latest trials.
The effect of a strictly plant-based diet
centered around brown rice—it was done in Asia—versus the conventional
diabetic diet on blood sugar control of patients with type 2 diabetes:
a 12-week randomized clinical trial. For the diabetic control diet, they set
up food exchanges and calculated specific calorie and portion controls,
whereas on the plant-based diet people could eat much as they want;
that's one of the benefits.
The emphasis is on food
quality rather than quantity, and they still actually
lost more weight. But even after controlling for
the greater abdominal fat loss in the plant-based group,
they still won out. Of course, it only works
if you actually do it, but those that pretty much stuck
to the healthier diet dropped their A1c levels 0.9%, which is what you
get taking the leading diabetes drug, but of course only
with good side effects. Yeah, but would it work in
an underserved population? The impact of a plant-based diet support
program on mitigating type 2 diabetes in San Bernadino, the poorest
city of its size in California. A randomized controlled trial,
but not of a plant-based diet itself as the title suggests,
but of just an education program telling people about the benefits
of a plant-based diet for diabetes, and then it was up to them. And still got a significant improvement
in blood sugar control.
Here are the numbers. Got a little better
in the control group, but way better in the plant-based
instruction and support group. And more plant-based diets
are not just effective in the prevention and management of
diabetes, but also its complications. Check this out. One of the most devastating complications
of diabetes is kidney failure. This shows the decline in kidney
function in eight diabetics in the one or two years
before switching their diets.
They all showed this steady,
inexorable decline on a fast track to complete
kidney failure and dialysis. But then they switched to a
special supplemented vegan diet, and their kidney decline
was stopped in its tracks. Imagine if they had switched
a year or two earlier! Most diabetics don't actually end up on
dialysis though because they die first. Cardiovascular disease is the major cause
of premature mortality among diabetics; that's why plant-based diets are perfect.
There is a general scientific consensus that the elements of a whole-foods
plant-based diet— legumes, whole grains, fruits,
vegetables, and nuts, with limited or no intake of processed
foods and animal products— are highly beneficial for preventing
and treating type 2 diabetes.
Equally important, plant-based
diets address the bigger picture by simultaneously treating cardiovascular
disease, our #1 killer, along with obesity, high blood
pressure, lowering inflammation, and we can throw cancer
into the mix too, our #2 killer. The bottom line is that the case
for using a plant-based diet to reduce the burden of diabetes
and improve overall health has never been stronger..
Video Transcript – As found on YouTube
Friday Favorites: Is Vegan Food Always Healthy?
"Is Vegan Food Always Healthy?" In my video on flexitarians,
I talk about how the benefits of eating a plant-based diet
are not all-or-nothing. Simple advice to increase
the consumption of plant-derived foods with
parallel reductions in the consumption of foods from
animal sources was found to confer a survival advantage,”
a live-longer advantage. They call it a pro-vegetarian eating
pattern, just moving in that direction, as a more gradual, gentle
doable approach. If you’re dealing with a serious
disease, though, like diabetes, avoiding some problem foods
completely may be easier than attempting to moderate their intake. It’s like clinicians would never tell
alcoholics to simply cut down on alcohol. Avoiding alcohol entirely
is a more effective and, ironically, easier for a problem drinker. Paradoxically, asking patients
to make a large change may be more effective than
making a slow transition. Diet studies show that recommending
more significant changes increases the changes that
patients actually accomplish. It may help to replace the common
advice, ‘all things in moderation’ with ‘big changes beget big results.’ Success breeds success.
After a few days or weeks of
major dietary changes, patients are more likely
to see improvements in weight and blood sugar levels— improvements that
reinforce the dietary changes. Furthermore, they may enjoy other health
benefits of plant-based eating. that may give them further motivation. Those who choose to eat plant-based
for their health say it’s mostly for general wellness and disease
prevention, or to improve their energy levels or immune function. They felt it gave them a sense
of control over their health, helps you feel better emotionally,
improves your overall health, and makes you feel better.
Most felt it was very important for
maintaining their health and well-being. For the minority that used it
for a specific health problem, it was mostly for high cholesterol
or weight loss, followed by high blood pressure
and diabetes, with most reporting they felt it helped a great deal. But others choose plant-based diets
for other reasons like animal welfare or global warming, and it looks
like they’re more likely to be eating things like vegan doughnuts,
sugary and fatty foods, compared to those eating
plant-based because of religious or health reasons. I mean the veganist vegan could bake
a cake using soda instead of eggs, with frosting, covered in marshmallow
fluff and chocolate syrup, topped with Oreos, with a side of Doritos
dipped in, vegan bacon grease.
But fruit for dessert… in the form of
Pop Tarts and Krispy Kreme pies. This, is a vegan meal. Yes, plant-based diets have
been recommended to reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes. However, not all plant foods
are necessarily beneficial. Like in that pro-vegetarian scoring
system you got points for eating potato chips and French fries,
just because they were technically plant-based, but Harvard researchers
wanted to examine the association of not only an overall plant-based diet,
but both healthy and unhealthy versions. So, they created the same kind
of pro-vegetarian scoring system weighted towards any sort
of plant-based foods, and against animal foods and then also
created a healthful plant-based diet index, where at least some whole
plant foods took precedence and Coca-Cola was no longer
considered a plant. Then lastly, they created an
unhealthful plant-based diet index by assigning positive scores
to processed plant-based junk, and negative scoring healthier
foods and animal foods.
And then they found that a more
plant-based diet in general was good for reducing diabetes risk, but eating
especially healthy plant-based foods did better, nearly cutting risk in half, while those eating more
unhealthy plant foods did worse. Now, but is that because they
were also eating more animal foods? People often eat burgers with their fries; so, they separated out the
effects of healthy plant foods, less healthy plant foods,
and animal foods.
And healthy plant foods were
protectively associated, animal foods were
detrimentally associated, and less healthy plant foods were more
neutral when it came to diabetes risk. Here’s what the graph looks like:
higher diabetes risk with more and more animal foods, no protection
whatsoever with junky plant foods, and lower and lower diabetes risk
associated with more and more healthy whole plant foods in the diet. So, they conclude that yes, plant-
based diets are associated with substantially lower risk of
developing type 2 diabetes, but it may not be enough to just
lower the intake of animal foods, but also less healthy plant foods as well..
Video Transcript – As found on YouTube
The Best Diet for Diabetes
"The Best Diet for Diabetes" There are all sorts of different scoring
systems to rate diet quality. My favorite, for its simplicity, is the
dietary phytochemical index: a fancy name for a simple concept. It's just the percentage of your calories
from whole plant foods, so 0 to 100. The average American diet
has a score of 12. Twelve out of a hundred; so, like on a
scale of one to ten, our diet is a one. You can split people up based on how they
score, and show how the higher you score the better your metabolic markers
when it comes to diabetes risk. There appears to be like this stepwise
drop in insulin resistance and insulin-producing beta-cell dysfunction
as you eat more and more plant-based. And that highest group was
only scoring about 30, less than a third of their diet
was whole plant foods, but better than the lowest, which was
down around the standard American diet. No wonder diets centered around
plants, emphasizing legumes— beans, split peas,
chickpeas and lentils— whole grains, vegetables,
fruits, nuts and seeds, and discouraging most or all animal
products are especially potent in preventing type 2 diabetes, and as a little bonus has been associated
with much lower rates of obesity, hypertension, hyperlipidemia,
cardiovascular mortality, and cancer.
And not just preventing type 2 diabetes
but treating it as well. A systematic review and meta-analysis
found that the consumption of vegetarian diets is associated
with improved blood sugar control, but how much improved?
Here's one of the latest trials. The effect of a strictly plant-based diet
centered around brown rice—it was done in Asia—versus the conventional
diabetic diet on blood sugar control of patients with type 2 diabetes:
a 12-week randomized clinical trial. For the diabetic control diet, they set
up food exchanges and calculated specific calorie and portion controls,
whereas on the plant-based diet people could eat much as they want;
that's one of the benefits. The emphasis is on food
quality rather than quantity, and they still actually
lost more weight. But even after controlling for
the greater abdominal fat loss in the plant-based group,
they still won out. Of course, it only works
if you actually do it, but those that pretty much stuck
to the healthier diet dropped their A1c levels 0.9%, which is what you
get taking the leading diabetes drug, but of course only
with good side effects.
Yeah, but would it work in
an underserved population? The impact of a plant-based diet support
program on mitigating type 2 diabetes in San Bernadino, the poorest
city of its size in California. A randomized controlled trial,
but not of a plant-based diet itself as the title suggests,
but of just an education program telling people about the benefits
of a plant-based diet for diabetes, and then it was up to them. And still got a significant improvement
in blood sugar control. Here are the numbers. Got a little better
in the control group, but way better in the plant-based
instruction and support group. And more plant-based diets
are not just effective in the prevention and management of
diabetes, but also its complications.
Check this out. One of the most devastating complications
of diabetes is kidney failure. This shows the decline in kidney
function in eight diabetics in the one or two years
before switching their diets. They all showed this steady,
inexorable decline on a fast track to complete
kidney failure and dialysis. But then they switched to a
special supplemented vegan diet, and their kidney decline
was stopped in its tracks. Imagine if they had switched
a year or two earlier! Most diabetics don't actually end up on
dialysis though because they die first. Cardiovascular disease is the major cause
of premature mortality among diabetics; that's why plant-based diets are perfect.
There is a general scientific consensus that the elements of a whole-foods
plant-based diet— legumes, whole grains, fruits,
vegetables, and nuts, with limited or no intake of processed
foods and animal products— are highly beneficial for preventing
and treating type 2 diabetes. Equally important, plant-based
diets address the bigger picture by simultaneously treating cardiovascular
disease, our #1 killer, along with obesity, high blood
pressure, lowering inflammation, and we can throw cancer
into the mix too, our #2 killer.
The bottom line is that the case
for using a plant-based diet to reduce the burden of diabetes
and improve overall health has never been stronger..
Video Transcript – As found on YouTube
The Best Diet for Diabetes
“” The Finest Diet Regimen for Diabetic Issues”” There are all type of various scoring
systems to rate diet regimen quality. My favorite, for its simplicity, is the
nutritional phytochemical index: an elegant name for an easy concept. It'' s just the portion of your calories
from entire plant foods, so 0 to 100. The ordinary American diet regimen
has a rating of 12. Twelve out of a hundred; so, like on a.
scale of one to ten, our diet regimen is a one. You can divide individuals up based upon just how they.
score, and demonstrate how the greater you score the better your metabolic pens.
when it comes to diabetic issues danger. There seems such as this step-by-step.
decrease in insulin resistance and insulin-producing beta-cell dysfunction.
as you consume an increasing number of plant-based.
And that highest group was.
only racking up concerning 30, less than a third of their diet.
was entire plant foods, however far better than the most affordable, which was.
down around the basic American diet regimen. No marvel diet plans centered around.
plants, stressing legumes– beans, divided peas,.
chickpeas and lentils– whole grains, vegetables,.
fruits, nuts and seeds, and inhibiting most or all animal.
products are particularly potent in preventing type 2 diabetes mellitus, and as a little bonus offer has actually been connected.
with much reduced rates of weight problems, high blood pressure, hyperlipidemia,.
cardio mortality, and cancer.And not just
stopping kind 2 diabetes mellitus.
but treating it too. A systematic testimonial and meta-analysis.
found that the intake of vegan diet plans is connected.
with improved blood glucose control, but just how much boosted? Here'' s among the latest trials. The effect of a strictly plant-based diet regimen.
focused around wild rice– it was carried out in Asia– vs. the traditional.
diabetic person diet plan on blood sugar level control of individuals with kind 2 diabetic issues:.
a 12-week randomized clinical trial. For the diabetic person control diet regimen, they establish.
up food exchanges and computed specific calorie and portion controls,.
whereas on the plant-based diet people could consume much as they desire;.
that'' s among the advantages.
The emphasis is on food. top quality instead of quantity, and they still really.
shed more weight. Yet even after managing for.
the higher abdominal fat loss in the plant-based team,.
they still triumphed. Obviously, it just functions.
if you actually do it, yet those that rather much stuck.
to the much healthier diet plan dropped their A1c levels 0.9%, which is what you.
get taking the leading diabetic issues medicine, but naturally only.
with excellent side effects.Yeah, however would it function in. an underserved population?
The influence of a plant-based diet assistance. program on mitigating kind 2
diabetic issues in San Bernadino, the poorest. city of its size in The golden state. A randomized controlled trial,. yet not of a plant-based diet plan itself as the title recommends,. yet of just an education and learning program informing people concerning the benefits. of a plant-based diet plan for diabetes, and after that it depended on them. And still got a considerable enhancement. in blood sugar level control. Here are the numbers.
Got a little far better. in the control group, yet way better in the plant-based. instruction and assistance group.And a lot more plant-based diet plans. are not just effective in the prevention and management of.
diabetic issues, however also its problems. Inspect this out.
Among the most destructive difficulties. of diabetes mellitus is kidney failing. This reveals the decrease in kidney.
feature in eight diabetics in the one or two years. before changing their diets. They all showed this consistent,. inexorable decrease on a
fast lane to complete. kidney failure and dialysis.But after that they switched over to a. unique supplemented vegan diet regimen, and their kidney decline.
was stopped in its tracks.
Visualize if they had actually switched over. a year or 2 earlier! Many diabetics don ' t in fact finish up on. dialysis though since they pass away initially. Heart disease is the significant reason. of premature death amongst diabetics; that ' s why plant-based diet plans are excellent.
There is a general clinical agreement that'the elements of a whole-foods. plant-based diet regimen– vegetables, entire grains, fruits,. vegetables, and nuts, with limited
or no intake of processed. foods and pet items– are highly beneficial for stopping. and treating kind 2 diabetes.
Equally important, plant-based. diet regimens attend to the larger photo by at the same time treating cardio. condition, our # 1 killer,
together with weight problems, high blood. pressure, lowering swelling, and we can toss cancer. into the mix also, our # 2 awesome. The bottom line is that the situation. for using a plant-based diet regimen to decrease the worry of diabetic issues. and enhance overall health and wellness has never ever
been more powerful.