Yes how weight is lost depends on so many personal factors ,surely it's wrong to eliminate an option that works for so many. As far as i know there are no vital vitamins in carbs (unlike fats) so why not let peope pick the route that suits them best ?We can but only hope for a sea change in the current dietary advice from the NHS/DUK-A herculean task no doubt but for LCHF to be at least put forward as an option would be one heck of an achievement indeed.
Surely people eat foods, not carbs or fats or proteins ( a lot of my daily protein comes from the 'starchy' carb called oats that I eat in the morning). A mixture of foods contains a mixture of vitamins, minerals and phytonutrients.as i know there are no vital vitamins in carbs (unlike fats) so why not let peope pick the route that suits them best ?
Definite progress; a study trialling the low carb diet for diabetic controll has made it to the London finals in May of this year Not something that would have been expected a year ago. Starch is concentrated sugar - bread has a higher glycemic index than table sugar itself. Last year a study in the same journal showed a direct relationship between rice consumption and incidence of type two diabetes .
Do you have a link? Cheers.
Definite progress; a study trialling the low carb diet for diabetic controll has made it to the London finals in May of this year Not something that would have been expected a year ago. Starch is concentrated sugar - bread has a higher glycemic index than table sugar itself. Last year a study in the same journal showed a direct relationship between rice consumption and incidence of type two diabetes .
Brilliant news!! Now will the NHS and Diabetes Uk take heed?
In about 20 years.
That's great news! They won't be able to tie it down because it's coming at them from all angles now.Definite progress; a study trialling the low carb diet for diabetic controll has made it to the London finals in May of this year Not something that would have been expected a year ago. Starch is concentrated sugar - bread has a higher glycemic index than table sugar itself. Last year a study in the same journal showed a direct relationship between rice consumption and incidence of type two diabetes .
thanks for that - I thought I wasn't supposed to say as the shortlist is not officially published untill this Friday- but obviously its out now !Why do you say "a study"
If you're Norwood Surgery in Southport, surely it's your own study in the Diabetes section?
And congratulations are in order as I see you made the shortlist onto the Primary care team as well if you are.
http://thebmjawards.bmj.com/the-2014-shortlist-0
http://www.norwoodsurgerysouthport.nhs.uk/Library/document_icons/Practice Leaflet new.pdf
It would have to be NHS only as I like most GPs don't do any private work - for the study all team members gave our time for freeWas it a diet you recommended to nhs, or private patients, or a mixture?
It would have to be NHS only as I like most GPs don't do any private work - for the study all team members gave our time for free
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